I have no doubt that running a sim on that particular situation leads to Rizzo making an out more often than not. That's just the basic baseball statistic that favors the pitcher in general.
However...
The intangibles are too much to overcome.
Rizzo: National League MVP candidate, swinging a bat getting hotter with each appearance, with big home run power. The biggest player in the biggest situation. My take is, I'll make Zobrist beat me (certainly more favorable odds for me) and gamble on maybe getting a double play. As it is, it didn't work out.
And that's the fun of second guessing...when it
doesn't work out.
I love Maddon and love everything about him, esp the way he handled this season. However, in Game 7, I disagreed with just about every single decision he made! Did we win despite him? Maybe. But he won!
Bonus aside: I'm a life-long Chicago sports fan, and I esp like Blackhawks hockey. If you know anything about Joel Quennville, you know that that he basically makes hilariously terrible decisions all year long, but in an elimination game he does what should have been common sense in the first place, the Hawks subsequently win, and Quennville gets "credited" for a "gutsy coaching adjustment".
My wife is quick to point out my zero rings to the Q's three. I retort that given the chance to coach the last six Hawks teams, I'd have six rings!!
Back to Maddon. I think Krukow is unfortunately right. This wacky cult of personality thing where coaches have to leave traces of evidence, i.e. fingerprints, on a World Championship team leads to unnecessary over-analysis and over-managing.
Just the opinion of one man, happy to take his Championship anyway he could get it though.
Joe Maddon rocks!