Son was told that he had the highest difference ratio between the two with more being fly balls. Son felt it was being told as a negative but was not sure
Any thoughts
Posts: 441 | Location: DFW | Registered: June 13, 2005
With all things being equal (defensively, quality and size of field, etc) I would prefer the groundball pitcher because I still have yet to see a groundball go over the fence.
However, all things are not always equal. If I played in a big yard with an outfield of guys who could really go get it and a comparably worse infield, then I'd prefer the fly ball pitchers.
On the other hand, if I had a solid infield (and a well groomed infield hopefully) I'd prefer the groundball pitcher, especially if the park tends to be hitter friendly.
Posts: 396 | Location: Richmond, VA | Registered: December 27, 2006
To me this is why statistics can be misleading unless there is more knowledge to go on. Does he get fly balls that are elevated fastballs being hit to shallow outfield or on the infield? Does he tend to throw higher and and are they hitting high flies to medium to deep outfield positions. There is a big difference. Are some of the hitters out in front of change-ups and popping them up? All things to consider. If he is putting it where he wants and they are not hitting it hard, he is doing well. I would work on being able to hit spots low in the zone to be able to induce a ground ball when needed.
Posts: 362 | Location: Missouri | Registered: February 14, 2005
You won't get very many doubleplays with a flyball pitcher. Also, playing your infield in with a runner on 3rd won't help if the batter hits a sac fly. Groundball pitcher is preferred in my opinion. Throw a 2 seam with runners on.
Posts: 11 | Location: Marietta, GA | Registered: November 03, 2003