Know WHY, according to Baseball-Reference.com, strikeouts (41,207) edged out hits (41,018) in the Big Leagues in 2018? In my opinion, the above MLB Tonight Brian Kenny interview of Trevor Bauer has the answers.
Could it be…
However, in my opinion, these are all symptoms to the direct cause. Yes, hitters are being taught that ground-balls are gross. And since the book and movie Moneyball
…are better predictors to scoring runs. Here’s a shot across the bow for the hitting coaches…
Back to the Trevor Bauer Evolution of Metrics conversation above,
Perry Husband, of HittingIsAGuess.com, has been sharing Effective Velocity principles for almost 2 decades, and it’s finally getting people’s attention. WHY? Because more and more pitchers are starting to apply the timing disruption principles. Unlike golf, timing is a MAJOR factor in how consistently hard a hitter hits the ball. And it’s THIS factor of a hitter’s success that’s under MAJOR attack.
Do you think I’m exaggerating? Read on, because Perry, myself, and many others see the writing on the wall…remember when Wayne Gretzky so famously said, “Skate to where the puck is going, not where it has been.”
I speak to MANY MANY coaches, and a majority of them, are disgusted with the sheer number of offensive strikeouts over the last few years, so their solution is to teach a defensive “just get on base” swing. Are you kidding?! More pitchers are throwing 96-mph+ at the higher levels nowadays, they LOVE facing hitters being taught a defensive “just get on base” swing. And it’s not just at the highest levels, overall average velocities are going up across the board because of better training programs.
And by the way, it’s not about the higher pitching velocities per se, because we can train hitters to see faster speeds in the “lab”, making the increased game velocities “seem” slower. That’s only one-dimension to pitching, as Trevor Bauer puts it in the interview.
It’s what pitchers are being taught to do with added velocity, manipulating hitters’ reaction times. Don’t you see, the game is speeding up for hitters, and coaches are ill equipped to deal with the adjustment right now. They’re running east, chasing a sunset!
Rest assured, we’re going to make a better decision and train differently. Coaches, you’ve been WARNED. In this post, we’ll discuss:
Here are my notes on Trevor Bauer’s scouting report on hitters…
Did you catch that last bullet point? There’s the Holy Grail of pitchers’ scouting reports right there. Other than that, a lot of REALLY good intel in almost 9-mins, so how do hitting coaches counter this gameplan? Take it from a hitter’s point of view, Carlos Pena, who studied under Perry Husband back in 2009, and in the following video, makes a good case to a promising counter-move…
How to Counter this Strategy…
Here are my notes on Carlos Pena’s scouting report on pitchers who use Effective Velocity…
Not sure I agree with Vito. Pitchers are just better today. When pitchers are throwing 99 mph fastballs and 92 mph sliders, the old hit it where it’s pitched and go up the middle approach doesn’t produce enough runs. And even Tony Gwynne would struggle today. With the shifts, hits 10 years ago are now outs. The only reasonable approach is to make your hard contact count by doing damage.
I agree, the league is encouraging the extreme swing. But here’s the reality, we can have consistent power without sacrificing swing quality. “All around” hitters were more prevalent back in the day. Hitters gotta get back on track, or else it’s going to be a long painful couple of years…in which case, they’ll be forced to make a change.
I agree, pitchers are throwing hard, but hitting high velocity can be trained, and I think the hitters you mentioned would have made the necessary adjustments. However, the problem is the more pitchers taking on 3-dimensional pitching as a strategy will and would make all hitters, of all eras, struggle. It takes more discipline and a more precise strategy to battle it.
Joey,
Shifts make hitting today so much more difficult. And I don’t buy the hit it where they ain’t approach. Pitchers typically locate for contact to the shift. I really hope the league slightly restricts shifts.
Also, because pitchers are better today and are using better tactics, the idea of stringing together three singles to score a run doesn’t produce enough runs in the long run.
Vito
A combination of how pitchers are pitching and using Analytics..but batters contribute to their ineptitude…mosts batters seem to swing the same way..these 2 factors combine to result in more K’s..
Batters need to alter their swings to make more contact…more like Rod Carew, and tony Gwynn used to do…how many k they have….
also I feel the owners want more HR….