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Further musings on why baseball finds itself where it does...
The population of the United States has roughly doubled in my lifetime. Wrigley Field added a few seats along the way, but it’s basically the same ballpark it always was, except for the fact that twice as many people now vie for the finite number of seats (and even more if you take into account the “growth of the game” along the way). I have to remind myself of this when I recall my dad taking my brother and me to the game a couple of hours before the first pitch for $5.00 seats and (outrageous!) $1 hot dogs. My kids will never get to have that experience, although they do know what a Jumbotron, StubHub and $10 nachos are like.
Anyway, somewhere along the way the pitching coaches noticed that MLB hitters bat .180 against a 95+ mph fastball and the arms race was on. With twice the size of the 1960s pool of talent to draw on, major league teams are now flush with flamethrowers. How do you counter this offensively? Three True Outcomes. Because you can no longer string together consecutive hits to produce runs, the statistically better approach is to work the count and swing from the heels.
What will baseball be like when in every at bat you’re facing Aroldis Chapman-like heat, even from the long relief chump?
Can the hitters ever catch up? Change the baseball? The park dimensions?
The population of the United States has roughly doubled in my lifetime. Wrigley Field added a few seats along the way, but it’s basically the same ballpark it always was, except for the fact that twice as many people now vie for the finite number of seats (and even more if you take into account the “growth of the game” along the way). I have to remind myself of this when I recall my dad taking my brother and me to the game a couple of hours before the first pitch for $5.00 seats and (outrageous!) $1 hot dogs. My kids will never get to have that experience, although they do know what a Jumbotron, StubHub and $10 nachos are like.
Anyway, somewhere along the way the pitching coaches noticed that MLB hitters bat .180 against a 95+ mph fastball and the arms race was on. With twice the size of the 1960s pool of talent to draw on, major league teams are now flush with flamethrowers. How do you counter this offensively? Three True Outcomes. Because you can no longer string together consecutive hits to produce runs, the statistically better approach is to work the count and swing from the heels.
What will baseball be like when in every at bat you’re facing Aroldis Chapman-like heat, even from the long relief chump?
Can the hitters ever catch up? Change the baseball? The park dimensions?