gehringer_2 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) 46 minutes ago, NorthWoods said: Ted Williams was in combat as a pilot. and there must have been a big Yankees fan on the draft board because he got called back for Korea and once had to make an emergency landing after his plane got shot up! Edited 18 hours ago by gehringer_2 Quote
Tiger337 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 25 minutes ago, Sports_Freak said: Hinch would take him out after 6 innings to bring in a AAA pitcher...lmao He would have left him in to pitch complete games the way everybody else did in that period. If you look around the league, you see that a lot of managers manage the way Hinch does now. The Tigers are not the only team platooning and pulling pitchers early. Quote
gehringer_2 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 3 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: Lolich threw 376 innings in 1971! circling back to the discussion about 'max effort all the time' pitching, Lolich is one of the guys who at least claims that it was very different when he pitched, that he did not pitch hard to a good part of the line-ups he faced.Now it's true that sometimes guys re-image their own histories a bit, but that is what Mickey has said on record. Quote
gehringer_2 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago 5 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: He would have left him in to pitch complete games the way everybody else did in that period. If you look around the league, you see that a lot of managers manage the way Hinch does now. The Tigers are not the only team platooning and pulling pitchers early. and it's for good reason: Almost every pitcher today is out of gas and does lose effectiveness somewhere around 100 pitches, which is probably more evidence that the old timers didn't throw max effort all the time, because there is no reason at all to think that today's pitchers should have less stamina. 1 1 Quote
NorthWoods Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 19 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: Lolich threw 376 innings in 1971! I really don't think you can attribute all of it or even a majority to weaker hitters. Quote
Tiger337 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 1 minute ago, NorthWoods said: I really don't think you can attribute all of it or even a majority to weaker hitters. I attribute it to different times. If they were pitching today throwing max velocity and max spin on every pitch, they would not be pitching 300+ innings. Ryan was a freak and would be today so he'd still be leading league in innings every year, but nowhere near the same volume. Quote
Screwball Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 4 hours ago, chasfh said: 2002 for pitch type, pitch value, and plate discipline; 2007 for velocity and movement; 2008 for contact and strike zone location; 2014 for spin; 2020 for arm angle Pre-2007 was measure by Sports Info Solutions; 2007 and on, Statcast and Pitch Info started measuring. When I did some research on the electronic strike zone I ran into the companies and tech behind all this. Wild and interesting stuff. And incredibly impressive. Quote
gehringer_2 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago (edited) 49 minutes ago, Tiger337 said: I attribute it to different times. If they were pitching today throwing max velocity and max spin on every pitch, they would not be pitching 300+ innings. Ryan was a freak and would be today so he'd still be leading league in innings every year, but nowhere near the same volume. JV was almost as much a freak as Ryan, and he has said that things changed even between the beginning and end of his career. When JV first came up he could throw mostly a ~91-95 mph fastball for 2 or three innings, add more offspeed the 2nd time through then comeback with the 97-99 heater on the third pass, and even when he was dealing up to triple digits he'd be adding and substracting from the fb by several mph pitch by pitch. No one pitches like that today. Today Skubal comes out of the gate at 97 or more throwing all his pitches, and the FB hardly varies.But Verlander had enough spin at 91-93 he could get away with it early in the game. Nobody can get away with that anymore. Plus there have been changes in the K zone. My impression is that in the years prior to it finally being fixed in one place by QuesTec, FX etc., a lot of umps called a lower zone - more like bottom of knees to waist than knees to letters, and it was probably harder to hit those low pitches for much power. The higer K zone took hitters a while to adjust to, but I think there may be more power in higher plane swings. Edited 16 hours ago by gehringer_2 Quote
Screwball Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago This has been a fascinating conversation on the art of pitching. The max effort stuff is interesting IMO. I played a bit of ball back in the day (early 70s) and there was no shortage of some husky farm boy throwing little tiny pills. Problem was, the pitch didn't do anything - a straight line - and then someone timed it, and barreled it, as they always do. That's why they don't go anywhere. Velocity isn't enough to get them to the big show. You don't have to throw in the 90s to get people out. It's call pitching. Think of the guys who don't throw hard enough to break a window, and make the batter look like a fool. Approach, execution, location, and take advantage of the weakness. As a pitcher, the hardest thing to face is you can blow it past someone anymore. You need a new approach. A thrower vs. a pitcher. Remember a game in Detroit one year. Great seats, 20 rows up around home plate. Cleveland. Kenny Rogers. Third hitter for Cleveland jacked a shot. After that, he shut them down and the Tigers won. He dazzled them with a bunch of junk for the next 8 innings. I thought he was a true master of his craft, and that game was a perfect example. That is the art of pitching. Quote
chasfh Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 5 hours ago, Tiger337 said: Velocity goes back to 2007 on FanGraphs. Spin rate and other stuff available back to 2015 on baseball savant. According to AI, Military engineers used electric timer and high-speed wire cameras to clock Walter Johnson at 91 MPH in 1917. Dopplar radar tracked Nolan Ryan's fastball at 100.7 in 1974. And that was before the new ball every few batters era, precipitated by the Ben Chapman beaning. Can you imagine a dirty brown baseball winging toward your body at 90 miles per hour in the late innings of an April game with a sunset looming? Quote
Sports_Freak Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago 1 hour ago, Tiger337 said: He would have left him in to pitch complete games the way everybody else did in that period. If you look around the league, you see that a lot of managers manage the way Hinch does now. The Tigers are not the only team platooning and pulling pitchers early. True, back in those days, nobody cared about pitch counts. Some people think today's pitchers are conditioned to only go 100 pitches. IDK, or care, if thats true. Quote
chasfh Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 2 hours ago, Sports_Freak said: Hinch would take him out after 6 innings to bring in a AAA pitcher...lmao I would think Nolan would go all Robin Ventura on A.J. if he tried to do that. Quote
chasfh Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 1 hour ago, gehringer_2 said: circling back to the discussion about 'max effort all the time' pitching, Lolich is one of the guys who at least claims that it was very different when he pitched, that he did not pitch hard to a good part of the line-ups he faced.Now it's true that sometimes guys re-image their own histories a bit, but that is what Mickey has said on record. I don’t think a guy hard-wired for competitiveness would lie to make himself look like he’s working less hard, so I would take Mickey’s word on this. 1 Quote
Tiger337 Posted 16 hours ago Posted 16 hours ago 1 minute ago, chasfh said: I don’t think a guy hard-wired for competitiveness would lie to make himself look like he’s working less hard, so I would take Mickey’s word on this. yeah, It's not like he said he pitched to the score. 1 Quote
chasfh Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Sports_Freak said: True, back in those days, nobody cared about pitch counts. Some people think today's pitchers are conditioned to only go 100 pitches. IDK, or care, if thats true. It was right in the middle of the Nolan Ryan era when the pitch count function started to gain some adherents, helped along by a book called The Diamond Appraised, written in 1989. It basically served as ground zero for the discussion of pitcher abuse and pitch limits. Quote
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