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| Jason
Bay happily reverted to the real world.... David Wright can
forget about at-bats like above Photo by Jim McIsaac-Getty
Photo
by Nick Laham - Getty |
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Jerry Manuel recently said something
to the effect that his
principal instruction to his hitters is to have a good at-bat. Such is the world of the thinker.
He figures, “take a lot of pitches, get that
starter out of the game.”
NEWS FLASH – Gary Matthews just got a
BASE HIT!!!!
This, by the way, is my second attempt
at writing something
intelligent about the Mets. Something
worthwhile. My 500 words of yesterday
were filled with hateful invective; my principal target was Jason Bay,
but
David Wright, Jose Reyes and Jerry Manuel also figured largely in my
mind and
on the paper too, not that anybody uses paper anymore.
Back to having good at-bats though,
that really shouldn’t be
the prime directive. The prime directive
should be to go up there and get a hit. It
should be assumed that major league hitters would
be able to figure
out the rest, i.e. don’t swing at anything you can’t hit; get four of
those and
you’ll walk. But that’s secondary. You should be up there to get a hit.
It’s pretty hard for most people to
hit a baseball at
all. You’re considered a very good
hitter if your batting average is .300, meaning that you not only hit
the ball,
but you hit it to a spot that no opponent could reach.
Walks are not included in that figure, but
on-base average does, further reflecting the batter’s efficiency. A further indication of productivity is
slugging percentage, a figure that measures total bases divided by
at-bats.
As every player watches his numbers,
they all do the best
they can at the plate, given their own proclivities and limitations. Some batters are free swingers and are very
good at hitting that way. Most batters
wait for a pitch they can hit and drive it. But it’s a pretty simple
process to
understand. Swing if the ball is over
the plate.
Not in Mets-Land.
In
the Mets world of over-think, the prime directive is to have a good
at-bat. That implies taking pitches,
making that opposing pitcher throw as many pitches as possible. What
this means
is that a batter will now take a first strike for sure and further try
to “work”
the at-bat as it progresses, meaning to take further pitches out of the
strike zone
if at all possible before either getting a hit or not.
Some hitters are adept at batting that
way. They have become so sophisticated as
hitters that their natural inclination is
to have a
good at-bat. These batters can foul off
pitch after pitch in the strike zone, waiting for not only a strike,
but a
strike that they can drive, and, if they drive it far enough, it’ll
result in a
home run, a wonderful event that not only helps the team but also does
wonders
for your numbers, thus eventually increasing your salary.
Most hitters can’t do that. Their bat control, their eye at the plate,
their
judgment, all those things
aren’t refined enough to enable a good at-bat all the time. Many hitters will take a first strike if just
to get a feel for the speed of the pitch. Some
batters just feel better getting their three
opportunities to hit
the ball. Taking a strike restricts
opportunities to two.
Given no further instruction, each
batter would be able to maximize
his potential at the plate, but, especially when opposed by a really
good
pitcher, at-bats could be either short or even very short, and if
repeated
inning after inning, this good pitcher could stay in the game for nine
innings,
or until that magic 100-pitch number rears its ugly head.
But most games would proceed
naturally, meaning sometimes
the team would get hits, and, stringing them together, get lots of runs
too, as
each hitter is given his three chances to hit the ball.
A team like the Mets could succeed very well
in that manner, happily swinging the bat and maximizing their potential.
You see, the Mets don’t really have
any of those really
accomplished hitters that can work counts, that can foul off all but
the very
best pitches ( Bobby Abreu comes to mind, Nick Johnson also comes to
mind but
in a much lesser way). The Mets have
some good hitters too. It’s just that
they’re not Bobby Abreu types. They are
three-strikes guys.
Jason Bay, David Wright, Jose Reyes,
maybe Ike Davis, they’re
better off if they’re given their opportunities, every one of them. Shackle them with the “good at-bat” directive
though, and you get a bad hitter, one who takes good pitches for
strikes,
swings at bad pitches, and, worst of all, takes a pitch that is only
questionably
a strike.
The Mets have been in that worst
possible of worlds. Their core guys have
looked bad at the plate,
embarrassingly bad at times, resulting in many losses that could have
and
should have been wins, as the Mets pitching has been surprisingly good.
As I have watched tonight’s game
though, it’s quite apparent
that either the prime directive has changed, or the players are
ignoring the
prime directive en masse. They’re
currently losing to the Nats 6-3 but the tying run is at the plate. Mets batters are swinging at anything that
moves. They’re being aggressive. Bay, Wright, Davis….they’re all hitting the
ball.
They might lose this game too, but it
sure has been exciting
to watch, and I’d bet anything it’s been more fun for the players as
well. They won’t lose tonight because they
were
looking for a walk. They’ll be the
aggressive
hitters they’ve been all their lives.
Last year, Jerry Manuel’s thrust was
hitting to the opposite
field, which killed David Wright’s numbers, especially his power
numbers. Last year was a lost year anyway
though, with
all the injuries. This year, the thrust
has been good at-bats; it’s been killing this team, and I can only hope
they’ll just
forget about it. You can’t change
hitters overnight.
(The Mets win, 8-6, scoring at will
and aggressive as hell ).

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