26 October 2011

Superstition: Talking About No-Hitters and Streaks







Baseball is a very superstitious sport. Many of those who play the game have their unique and sometimes bizarre rituals that they practice before, during, or after games. In a humorous scene in the movie Bull Durham the star pitcher "Nuke" wears women's lingerie during every outing. In baseball, the breaking of superstitions is regarded as a serious offense. Doing this generates bad luck and for some reason almost immediately results in a non-desired outcome.  The best example of breaking superstition is the single most forbidden subject matter to talk about: No Hitter’s. No hitters are a rare occurrence and highly valued in baseball. In the game, it is a “known fact” that talking about a hitter will result in a hit, ruining the pitcher’s perfect game. Due to the rarity of this event, any violation of this superstition is regarded as nearly sacrilegious to the sport. However, as no hitters are rare occurrence, this does not happen often. There are many other and much more frequent habits that players undertake as a form of superstition. Such traditions include tying one’s shoes before an at bat, or not washing a uniform while on a winning streak.

12 October 2011

Calling Pitches



As a catcher, I personally love the art of calling a good game. This has been a skill that I have fine-tuned through many practices and games. Knowing what pitch to call in what situation can lead to an important out, or a game changing hit. Most hitters are looking for “their pitch” early in the count when there are one or no strikes against him. For
the typical athlete this pitch is a fastball somewhere over the middle of the plate. It is critical that the pitcher and catcher are able to keep the offense off-balance and uncertain about what pitch is coming. Therefore, as a catcher, this “hitter’s pitch” is exactly what you wish to avoid. This is a good time to call a first pitch off-speed, such as a change-up or a curve ball. Ok great now there is one strike on the batter, and already his approach to his at bat has been thrown off. Because you have just thrown an off-speed pitch for a strike, he will most likely expect it again. Now is when you should change speeds and location on him with a fastball, inside. If the hitter is now expecting an off-speed pitch, he will not be able to react in time to make solid contact with a fastball, resulting in an easy ground out. This is the essence of good game calling: unsettling hitters at the plate so that they can’t expect what pitch is coming.



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Mike Piazza broke his bat on this by MelvinSchlubman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.