Pinstripe Alley: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:



Sports blogs for fans, by fans.
New Blog: Backing the Pack for NC State Fans!


Thinking About Pitching and Umpires

More fascinating stuff from the Hardball Times.

If you haven't spent fifteen minutes reading Jonathan Hale's breakdown of umpire's strike zone tendencies, get a cup of coffee and check it out.

If the Yankees aren't paying someone to track which umpires are scheduled to call games, and offer suggestions on when it's safest to use a spot starter, I'd like to volunteer for the position.  I'm willing to sleep on a cot in the boiler room so long as I can sit behind the dugout for all home games.

As Kevin000 and I recently discussed at length, knowing when to give the kids an extra day or even skip a turn in the rotation is going to be crucial to their development, both in 2008 and long term.

If I'm the Yankees I want to make sure that the umps with the largest strike zones are behind the plate when Jeff Karstens or (gag) Kei Igawa take the mound.  That could matter more than whether we're facing the Orioles or the Royals.

0 recs | Comment 2 comments

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

Igawa
For Igawa, I think we would need to import a Japanese umpire with the tall and narrow strike zone he is used to. That said, Igawa deserves every bad call he gets from the umps. He cant locate his pitches for shit.
"It's great to be young and a Yankee"

by stillmonster on Nov 28, 2007 4:31 PM EST reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Tough to do ...
It's hard to match strike zone tendencies with umpires. However, pitchers and coaches do keep diaries of who's calling what.

For example, I keep detailed accounts of who tends to call what, and factor that into a game plan. If I have an umpire who gives 3-4" off the outside corner, I'm busting a guy inside and making sure my kid knows that he must get the ball off the plate 3-4" to get the out.

I also work off that distance, and try to stretch it. An umpire who will give you 3-4" will likely give you a low call as well. Whereas an umpire who is church straight on the strikezone has a tendency to call higher strikes.

Pitching isn't just about fastballs, curves, adding and subtrating, and knowing the hitters. It's also about knowing the umpires and pitching to their tendencies. Look no further than Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine as prime examples of knowing umpire tendencies.

In all pretty fascinating.

"Baseball is the background music of my life." -George Will

by Ronster22 on Nov 28, 2007 4:32 PM EST reply reply actions actions   0 recs

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

Welcome to Pinstripe Alley, an SB Nation blog about the 26-time World Champion New York Yankees.

Community Guidelines
Start posting about the Yankees »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recommended FanPosts

Joba_small
The Francisco Cervelli Facts

Recent FanPosts

2160787714_e6e5c1dfd7_small
Red Sox Nation Is Real,.........
Dvc00218_small
Videos and Michael Kay
Lebron_james_small
Please help with this ..
4315_108082584044_546169044_2714549_7265838_n_small
We have a problem in baseball, and it has 3 different legs.
Small
Sanchez and Foreign Players!
Small
Interview with former Yankee pitcher, Ross Ohlendorf
2160787714_e6e5c1dfd7_small
My Life In Boston
Small
Joba or Hughes
Small
Yankee greats of all Time
Mickey-mantle-at-yankee-stadium-1963-photographic-print-c10115880_small
Hinske? Yanks acquire Hinske?

Post_icon New FanPost All FanPosts Carrot-mini

SPONSORS


Managers

Small Travis G

Bigblueview_small Ed Valentine

Editors

Small John Amato

Dsc00073_small jscape2000

Authors

Cyc2_small CrazyYankeeChick

Official Partner of Yahoo! Sports