Frank Coztansa wrote:
24_Guy wrote:
How many different ways can I answer it? Your definition of perfect is looser than mine. There are too many variables involved in a game like Buerhle's to say he pitched perfectly. If no batter ever makes contact with a pitch, that would be perfect. Wood was much closer to achieving that than Buehrle was.
No, its not.
The American Heritage Dictionary wrote:
Perfect Game
NOUN:
Baseball: A complete game in which no opposing batter reaches base.
Sports: A game in bowling in which a player bowls 12 successive strikes.
You = wrong.
That definition of perfect is no more accurate than the pickle I talked about. It is an overly simplistic definition of baseball perfection that ignores every conceivable nuance of the game. It's semantics. Buehrle was not perfect. He did not intend for the ball that Wise caught to be hit that far. He did not calculate in his head the distance to the centerfield wall and formulate that into the pitch that he threw. Just like Wood cannot control whether a slow grounder ends up in one location vs. 2 feet closer to where the fielder was standing.
Those aren't elements of skill, they are elements of luck.
What the pitcher CAN control is how difficult it is for a batter to hit the ball, and hit it well. That being the case, Wood was better than Buehrle.
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Buerhle put Wise in a position where he could catch the ball.
Come on, read that sentence to yourself, BR!
You can't possibly explain how Buerhle formulated Wise's skill, the wind speed and direction, and the distance to the wall, into the pitch he threw. He got lucky. I would bet $100 if he came on here, he'd admit he got tagged and Wise saved his ass. That argument is more of a stretch than what Wise did to catch the ball.
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
We can only go on what we know. Wood put 2 players on the basepaths. Buerhle didn't put any players on the basepaths.
But we actually know a lot more than that. We know that Wood struck out 20 batters and made most of the hitters in that lineup look like little leaguers. We know he gave up one scratch hit, and that Buehrle allowed many more balls hit into play that, given any different set of random circumstances, would likely have resulted in a typical 3- or 4-hit game.