Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
It's remarkable how the way the game is viewed has changed. Let's look at it from the batter's side. There was a hitter's roundatable hosted by Bob Costas, I think on HBO about ten or fifteen years ago. One of the participants was Michael Young who said something that really struck me. He said that when he first came to the big leagues (I think around 2000) he was embarrassed and felt he let the team down if he struck out. But at the end of his career he felt no shame in striking out but was embarrassed if he went up and made an out on the first pitch.
Anyway, obviously a pitcher with big "stuff" who is capable of striking out a lot of guys has a greater margin for error than a guy who is going to have a lot of balls put into play which over time will turn into hits at a 30% clip. But too often those guys who just come up dominating every batter never really learn how to pitch a ballgame. They simply don't have to.
Steve Stone will often make oblique reference to some of the ways he outsmarted hitters. And how he was looking ahead to facing the same hitters later in the game. Oddly enough, he was a flamethrower as he was coming up, but somehow, probably through some injury, lost his velocity and had to rely on his wits along with a pretty good curveball.
Mark Buehrle is a guy I watched pitch a lot of games. Maybe more than I've seen anyone else pitch. He didn't get into the seventh inning so often by accident. It was amazing to see him go through the line up with his mediocre fastball and a cutter, aided by an elite pickoff move and defense and get into a tight spot in the seventh or eighth inning where there were men on and two outs and the game was on the line and he had a two strike count on a hitter and out of nowhere he just dropped a curveball that he hadn't thrown all night right into the zone while the batter stood there flatfooted and shaking his head. That's pitching a ballgame.
The strikeout is not disincentivized (not paid) in 2024 like it was in 1980. You got paid less (rightly or wrongly) in 1980 if you K'ed a bunch. You might not be incentivized (paid) to K in 2024, but you aren't paid less because of K's. So you're going to get hitters who care less about K's. Also the tradeoff for more K's is fewer balls in play (disincentivized for the reasons mentioned before) but more HR's incentivized (paid) moreso now than ever.
The other thing about BABIP is that it measures all hitters across the league. Sure if you're facing Betts you might want to be careful because his BABIP is .389 or something. If you're facing any number of the White Sox hitters you can just say hit this sucker because even on a good day they are .245 BABIP guys. That's what we are talking about navigating a lineup. Know who to challenge and when. The problem now is that guys are just developed to be max effort every at bat strikeout guys because after they pitch their 85 max effort pitches, you just turn it over to 5 guys in the bullpen who are also going max effort.
If you don't incentivize (pay) guys to throw deeper in the game, guys aren't going to do that. Right now it's cheaper, more efficient, repeatable, effective, and valuable to develop 5 inning max effort starters, and back them up with 8 guys in the bullpen who are max effort one inning guys. None of those guys reasonably needs more than two pitches, and you need very little command. I mean some of those bullpen guys are 1 and 1/2 pitch guys.