DallasAg 94 said:
Proposition Joe said:
DallasAg 94 said:
shack009 said:
It wouldn't be absolutely insane against a lefty pitcher. It just makes absolutely no sense against a right hander.
We saw them IBB Seager in the 3rd inning yesterday because they're completely unafraid of Grossman. Maybe they would walk Seager with Lowe hitting third, but at least we would then feel better about getting a hit after that.
Context.
2 on (2nd & 3rd) - 2 Outs. Seager is up.
Result: In almost every imaginable scenario, you walk Seager who is 2nd in the AL in BA and one of the most professional hitters in MLB, to get to someone... anyone... who isn't. Grossman or anyone else... they walk Seager.
Him scoring was inconsequential to the situation.
So in one sentence you are saying that how good the hitter is matters (Seager), but then trying to say how good the hitter trying to hit once he gets on base doesn't?
Sound logic.
You are smart enough...
In most situations 2nd & 3rd - 2 Outs... you almost always walk the bases loaded to give you forced outs at any base. True or False.
If that is the go-ahead run, you may decide to not put him on base. There is only 1 player in the AL that you might consider protecting Seager, but the truth is... you'd likely still put Seager on. It was hyperbole.
There's just so much wrong with this.
1) No, I wouldn't say in most situations with runners on 2nd/3rd and 2 outs you almost always walk the bases loaded.
2) But even if that were the case, it wasn't 2nd and 3rd with 2 outs -- it was 3rd base and 2 outs.
3) But neither of those really matter all that much, because even if you are defending putting Seager on base (which most people wouldn't argue against), you are still batting a guy hitting 0.206 vs righties behind him... in a scenario where in at least his first two AB's he'd be facing a righty.
You are acknowledging that the guy behind Seager is probably going to get a chance to hit in that scenario no matter who he is -- so does it seem smart that we'd want a guy who hits like Grossman to be that guy?
But wait! There's more!
In the T3 (man on 3rd, 2 outs), Kevin Cash IBB's Seager to pitch to Grossman.
In the T6 (man on 2nd, 2 outs), Kevin Cash
does not IBB Seager (and pays for it).
Why would he decide to do it in the T3 but not in the T6? Because in the T3 he had a righty on the mound so he was happy with that matchup vs Robbie. In the T6 he had gone to Ponce, a lefty, so suddenly pitching around Seager to pitch to Grossman (who hits 0.309 vs lefties) didn't make sense anymore.