![]() |
|
|
|
|
#1 |
|
NetShrine Creator & Curator
Join Date: May 2002
Location: NetShrine WHQ
Posts: 5,548
|
If a FT catcher had somewhere between 15 to 20 (or more) passed balls in a season, most would be quick to say "bad hands."
I was thinking about this more - it's probably safe to say that a FT catcher actually catches about 15,000 pitches a year - meaning balls that land in his mitt, not counting pitches that end up as hits, outs, fouls, etc. So, does missing .001 of the pitches possible of being caught really mean you are a bad receiver?
__________________
Steve, Forum Administrator "They come and they go, Hobbs. They come and they go." That's why there's NetShrine.com |
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
Guest
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Scrappers territory
Posts: 2,515
|
If you have 15-20 PB's and you catch Pedro -- yes, you have bad hands.
If you had 15-20 PB's and you caught Charlie Hough -- you were doing the job. |
|
|
|
|
#3 | |
|
NetShrine's Evangelist
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Living by faith, and not by sight!
Posts: 2,194
|
Quote:
I don't think so. I have always viewed negatively the attempts to classify all wild pitches as passed balls. Is it not true, though, that a catcher is only charged w/a passed ball if a runner advances, or gets on base after a strikeout? Catchers probably let more pitches by them than 15-20, although they may not be counted as passed balls. |
|
|
|
|
|
#4 |
|
Netshrine Vacuum Cleaner
|
Don't they only count as passed balls when runners advace because of it?
|
|
|
|
|
#5 | |
|
Guest
|
Quote:
It's rule 10.15 (b) A catcher shall be charged with a passed ball when he fails to hold or to control a legally pitched ball which should have been held or controlled with ordinary effort, thereby permitting a runner or runners to advance. So a runner would have to advance, or in the case of a missed third strike, the batter woudl have to take first. |
|
|
|
|
|
#6 | |
|
NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Home of the T-Bones
Posts: 11,116
|
Quote:
Depends on when you miss them I guess. I don't see how PB's are any more unfair than wild pitches. Afterall, the pitcher throws more pitches than the catcher has to catch.
__________________
KCBOOMER Buck O'Neil: The Monarch of Baseball |
|
|
|
|
|
#7 | |
|
NetShrine All-Century Team
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Winter Springs, FL
Posts: 2,503
|
Quote:
Exactly
__________________
"I would submit that if the world survives for a million years, perhaps its finest hour may be that in the last half of the 20th century, when the power to blow up the world rested in the hands of a few men in two very unsophisticated and suspicious countries, we didn't do it, and one American, Richard Nixon, moved the cold war away from permanent confrontation toward victory. How could any wrong that he did compare with that?" - John Sears |
|
|
|
|
|
#8 | |
|
NetShrine Rookie Of The Year
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: rural Illinois
Posts: 57
|
Quote:
Bingo, seeing as how we don't rate the pitchers based on how many wild pitches they make (nor should we). An important point to remember is that very very few PBs nullify an out, which is the only type of fielding miscue worth getting worked up over (usually; don't want that runner getting into scoring position late and close, but how often does that happen on a PB?). Perspective: In 2002 Mike Piazza was 27 for 152 (18%) on throwing runners out, + 8 PB. Jason LaRue was 28 of 62 (45%), + a league-leading 20 PB (second was 9 PB, so that was 20 with a bullet). So for LaRue to have allowed bases at the same rate as Piazza, he would have had to have 101 PBs. Or another way, Piazza was 81 PBs worse than LaRue. |
|
|
|
|
|
#9 |
|
NetShrine Creator & Curator
Join Date: May 2002
Location: NetShrine WHQ
Posts: 5,548
|
Maybe this is also one of those things that you have to see - to judge the catcher?
The catcher I see the most, day in and day out, is Jorge Posada. I've seen him turn fastballs in the strikezone into passed balls. Sometimes, behind he plate, he looks more like Spanky doing "Friends, Romans, Countrymen" fighting off peas with his shield, than a big league backstop giving pitches safe haven in his mitt. It's not fair to judge a catcher with a knuckleballer on his staff to someone like Stonehands Jorge - - - but, if you just use PBs, you are.
__________________
Steve, Forum Administrator "They come and they go, Hobbs. They come and they go." That's why there's NetShrine.com |
|
|
|
|
#10 |
|
NetShrine's Historian
|
There are some catchers that are excellent at preventing wild pitches. Myself, it's a silly distinction between WP and PB. Call it something else, credit the pitcher and catcher, and get on with it.
|
|
|
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Balls Fail Troy's Squeeze Test | Max Power | 2002 Hot Baseball Chatter Archives | 12 | 10-22-2002 07:43 PM |
| Foul Balls | KCBOOMER | 2002 Baseball History Archives | 7 | 10-03-2002 10:40 PM |
| Passed on the Babe | TreAnt985 | 2002 Baseball Trivia Archives | 6 | 06-11-2002 03:19 PM |
| Unbalanced = Unfair? | Slippery Pedro | 2002 Hot Baseball Chatter Archives | 22 | 05-20-2002 08:46 AM |
| Small Thoughts Today | Xanadu Dragon | 2002 Baseball History Archives | 14 | 01-10-2002 02:12 PM |