Master Index of Archived Threads
The DH in the National League?
Mets Guy in Michigan Apr 27 2015 11:13 AM |
[url]http://www.si.com/mlb/2015/04/26/national-league-dh-washington-nationals-max-scherzer
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TransMonk Apr 27 2015 11:19 AM Re: The SH in the National League? |
Max Scherzer is a baby.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 11:22 AM Re: The SH in the National League? |
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Call me paranoid, but there seems to be a coordinated stealth campaign to soften the blow in preparation for a planned switch to DH-Ball. Craig Calcaterra just wrote an advocacy piece that amounted to "This isn't about Wainwright, but seriously, check out what happened to Wainwright."
This isn't a bad rallying point for a counter-campaign. You're a ballplayer. Show some professional pride. Bartolo Colon is a disaster up there and you don't hear him whining.
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d'Kong76 Apr 27 2015 11:22 AM Re: The SH in the National League? |
There are a lot of people jumping on this bandwagon. For me, they
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LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Apr 27 2015 11:33 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Well, yeah. And people should be able to teleport. And livestock chickens should have, like, eight thighs and they should all be calorie free. I should be able to get drunk/sober/thin at will!
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d'Kong76 Apr 27 2015 11:36 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
You can't teleport??
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batmagadanleadoff Apr 27 2015 11:44 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Ironically, all those things will one day be possible.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 27 2015 11:49 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Or maybe humans will have eight thighs and chickens will be able to teleport.
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cooby Apr 27 2015 11:50 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I would like it. I have always liked it but I realize I am way in the minority (such as with the black jerseys)
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 12:15 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Baseball players getting hurt while playing baseball is a lousy reason to insert rules that release them from playing certain aspects of baseball.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 27 2015 12:19 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Here's my solution: Don't drop the DH suddenly, leaving owners stuck with contracts. Instead, say that the rule will expire in five years. Or eight years. Or ten. That leaves plenty of time to plan for the change. And to appease the union, expand the active roster from 25 players to 27. Or 28.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 12:27 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
And, as I try to discuss every time this issue comes around, is there really strong evidence that the DH works better for the players' interests?
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dgwphotography Apr 27 2015 12:35 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Unfortunately, true or not, that is the perception.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 27 2015 12:36 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I think at most it helps 15 players each season. These would be guys who have full-time jobs, and earn the salary of a regular player, instead of the salary of a bench player. If the elimination of the DH was combined with the expansion of the roster to 27 players, that would create 60 new major leaguers, and 60 new union members.
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Ceetar Apr 27 2015 12:38 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I'm on board. I've given up hoping the pitcher's will actually taking hitting seriously. They don't. As amusing as Colon is to watch, he's hurting the Mets with the bat. (although small sample size this season he's actually helping) Pitchers openly joke about not being paid to hit.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 27 2015 12:41 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I'd like them to delay this for another forty years or so. In 2055, I'll be 92 years old, and either dead or nearly dead. Either way, I won't have much baseball watching ahead of me, so they can do whatever they want.
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Ashie62 Apr 27 2015 12:42 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I like the DH.
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Ashie62 Apr 27 2015 12:43 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Depends on who you root for.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 27 2015 12:43 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Ummm.... no.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Apr 27 2015 12:44 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
This Selig Era strategy of marketing the game by marketing the player led to all the crap about the Buster Posey Rules and I have no doubt that Wainwright will be the Tendon That Killed The Pitcher Hitting Once and For All.
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themetfairy Apr 27 2015 12:46 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Eliminate the DH entirely. Make it real baseball again!
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Zvon Apr 27 2015 01:09 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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AllAdat^. Cept Wainwrights whining won't change it. It'll start a much louder debate.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 01:10 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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I tend to hope that perceptions have the potential to change following investigations into the facts, followed by cold and dispassionate revelation of the findings. The MLBPA, if no one else, has an abiding interest in being informed by data and not perception.
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Gwreck Apr 27 2015 01:34 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
This is the first baseball rule change I can ever think of that could have a real, consequential diminishment of my love for the game (and would lead to spending far less of my money on it).
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Apr 27 2015 01:56 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I'll ask again: Who is going to stop this?
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cooby Apr 27 2015 02:04 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Dumb? Humph! Anyway, yeah I do find pitcher hitting tedious, but mostly because they are so damn pathetic at it.
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Ceetar Apr 27 2015 02:06 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Considering I believe the only thing that has to happen (either for adding or removing) is simply the Commish to be all "Make it so" at the beginning of the season.
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 02:36 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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He's a commissioner not a dictator and as such can neither make it happen unilaterally nor banish it. This is an owners + players decision. The best Manfred, or his successor, can do is try to steer the argument.
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G-Fafif Apr 27 2015 02:40 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
There's gotta be a Kevin Long for pitchers, a hitting coach whose sole brief would be to get these guys competent at this aspect of their job. One team does it and gains an edge and suddenly it's The New Market Efficiency and everybody will want in, including the pitchers who see hitting is possible for their breed.
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 02:46 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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I think it works well for a small cadre of high profile players [Papi, Pujols, Fielder, etc. - either permanently or in their near future] and the union tends to hear their voices louder than others and often to the exclusion of others as we saw with the steroid issue which was ignored for years for fear of offending the upper crust. The union's quite silent also on tobacco use even on the heels of Tony Gwynn's death. But in the larger sense you're right. Even if the benefit thing ins't totally false argument it's at least one with a bunch of holes. The narrative usually goes that if there were no DH then baseball would have never known the likes of Edgar Martinez & David Ortiz. Sure we would have, they'd have been 1st basement; bad ones maybe, but of course they never had incentive to even try to get better so maybe not. And if their bad fielding DID diminish their overall careers then by definition it would have been to the benefit of the guy with the lesser offense but the more complete and balanced game. The DH does not now and never did CREATE a job, it merely alters the criteria for one of them.
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Ceetar Apr 27 2015 03:04 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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It's simply "let it be so"
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 03:11 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Yes, any league MAY ELECT to use it.
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Ceetar Apr 27 2015 03:47 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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This IS the rule to the game. And where is that declared how that's going to be handled and who can and cannot block it? I think this rule was previously a power of the league president, but I'd have to look at an archive for that. If so, where is the rule stating how that's handled now? club presidents? sometimes it's just Manfred decided these things,because they're usually trivial.
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 04:38 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
This IS the rule to the game. -- What is?
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d'Kong76 Apr 27 2015 05:44 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-hist ... itter-rule
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Lefty Specialist Apr 27 2015 05:52 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Hell, why not have 9 DH's? Have an offensive team and a defensive team. Lots of crappy-hitting shortstops and catchers, too.
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Frayed Knot Apr 27 2015 05:58 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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That's where the simplistic 'Who would you rather see ...' argument falls apart. Sure, I'd rather see Papi hit than a BoSox pitcher. But I'd also rather see Papi hit over their .195-hitting catcher Ryan Hannigan. And I'd rather see someone else run the bases other than Papi so maybe a Designated Runner is in order. And I'd rather see Rey Ordonez field (even now) than either Flores or Murphy ... and there's no end to where that argument goes if carried to its logical conclusion.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 06:03 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Well there's a broad array of skill levels, I think. But the lower standard means the greater the thrill when a player does succeed. In general, though, specialization in all sports is a bad thing. Generalization is always more interesting. Because if giving a player a chance to flourish at what he does best means sometimes risking him in situations that he does not much better than the rest of us, that humanizes him. And that's real and engaging. Protecting people from their weaknesses takes them out of the human struggle. That's why Colon is so fascinating — the grace with which he struggles against the seemingly obvious limits of his human frailty.
I was thinking more about how National League teams have to have deeper and more experienced benches and bullpens, and therefore deliver more modestly decent-paying jobs in exchange for the one high-paying job the American League teams have.
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Ceetar Apr 27 2015 10:18 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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where in the rules does is say the words 'may elect' means a vote of the league's clubs and/or consent of the players? Besides that that's how they did it to add the DH rule to the rulebook? The Merger of the NL and AL and the abolishment of the presidents makes them all one entity run by the commissioner. I mean, all these things are run by committees nowadays. It'd probably ultimately work exactly the same way instant replay rules and pace of play rules went into effect. Technically Tony Clark of the Players Association was in agreement with them, but I can't find any indication that his consent was required. They established a committee to address the pace of play, and then that committee, Clark, and Selig/Manfeld announced them. I don't think that went to a vote of NL owners.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 10:25 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Can we agree that the rules aren't clear when they say "Any league may..." and it is ambiguous who speaks for an entire league, and what they can decide unilaterally and what they cannot? And can we agree to have no more posts beginning with "Where in the rules...?"
Can we agree that these sorts of contradictions make my head swim? The history of labor, the NLRB, and the MLBPA make it CLEAR that a change in working conditions of that magnitude will not be unilaterally imposed upon a union-organized shop without the consent and contractually negotiated agreement of said union. Certainly not with regard to a union commonly referred to as the most powerful in the country.
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Edgy MD Apr 27 2015 10:49 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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In 1973, the rule change was voted on by club presidents, who approved it, 8-4. So, no.
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Gwreck Apr 28 2015 12:12 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Madison Bumgarner, on the correct side of this issue.
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MFS62 Apr 28 2015 06:50 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
If the rosters stay at 25, why would the elimination of that rule eliminate jobs?
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Frayed Knot Apr 28 2015 07:12 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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That, of course, is exactly the reason they'd object. I think that argument's a bit overblown in that the days of each team having one designated (and usually old, slow, expensive) guy to be the everyday DH are at least partially gone. Many teams rotate several guys in and out of that position either on a strict platoon or they'll DH guys who also play the field several times per week. But then think about how much more reluctant teams will be to sign 30-ish y/o hitters to lengthy deals [ARod, Pujols, Fielder, Miggy Cabrera, Cano, etc.] knowing they have the fallback position to make them either partial or full-time DH's in the back half of those deals, and how the union sees those contracts as the kind of rising tide deals that lift all the other boats. That's why, as Grimm said above, the only way you could possibly get rid of it would be to set a deadline maybe 10 years in advance so that every team has fair warning and it won't blow up any current contracts.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 07:19 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I don't think "tough" has been a successful negotiating tactic with the MLBPA for some time.
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Ceetar Apr 28 2015 07:39 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Sure, but if all pitchers took hitting as seriously as he did last year, this wouldn't be an issue. 17/66 with 2 walks, 2 doubles and 4 home runs. .258/.286/.470 he had the highest ISO on the team last year. Do something well as a pitcher. You don't have to be even replacement level, but have a serious slugging percentage, lead the league in pitcher walks (Jon Niese at 6 was one behind Strasburg), even execute picture perfect bunts 99% of the time and run hard would add more value than probably 95% of pitchers these days. They're not taking this seriously. And it's not just the pitchers, it's the entire organizations. Hell, the media doesn't help either. Occasionally you'll get a guy asking about a failed bunt by a pitcher, but rarely do see a manager asked hard questions about how a pitcher keeps failing to come through with RISP. "Terry, Colon has stranded 13 runners over his last three starts, in which you lost by a combined 5 runs. Talk about that." And then Terry never responds "Long's been working with him. He's been putting in some time in the cage and made an adjustment we think well help." No, we get jokes about maybe Colon can get 4! hits this season. Like it's a trivial piece of information and not important at all.
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Centerfield Apr 28 2015 07:43 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
The fact that this is even being discussed makes me angry. Fuck the DH.
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Frayed Knot Apr 28 2015 07:52 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Keith Olbermann told a story on his show yesterday about the NL putting adoption of the DH to a vote (around 1980). Philly GM Bill Giles was owner Ruly Carpenter's agent at the meeting and he had instructions to vote FOR it. But when the resolution stated that adoption of the rule, even if approved, wasn't going to begin for another two seasons Giles wasn't sure what to do and was unable to reach his owner who was out on his boat fishing in the Delaware Bay that day. So Philly wound up abstaining in the vote and that one non-vote was the margin which kept the resolution from passing. The NL has never brought it to a vote since. Makes me kind of nostalgic for the days when people were routinely unreachable. Actually a lot of things make me nostalgic for those days.
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Mets Guy in Michigan Apr 28 2015 08:06 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Considering our pitchers seem to have had issues being able to even lay down a bunt, I think it's a problem the team should address. Heck, I don't get why pitchers don't realize its in their best interests to be able to hit. Given that self-interest, I'm surprised they aren't focused on it. It's not like they're not already incredible athletes. They should be able to figure out how to at least bunt the runner over.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 08:22 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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If you've been reading attentively, you'd see that thathat's not why this is an issue. If you're concerned that pitchers and teams don't take hitting seriously enough, by all means, advocate for a more serious approach be taken. Please put the Mets and their pitchers at the front of this advocacy. The way I see it, if teams are generally neglecting an improvable part of their game, it's an opportunity for the Mets.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 08:30 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Olberman largely cribbed that from Wikipedia. But Wikipedia's source is a 2013 Baseball Tonight broadcast, so maybe he's the original source after all. Anyhow, one thing missing is that Pittsburgh was instructed — like someone out of 1776 — to vote with Philly no matter which way they go, so Pittsburgh voted Nay also, and a proposal expected to easily gain a majority gained only four out of 12 votes (with Nelson Doubleday providing one of the Yay votes). The main NL proponent of the rule change was John Clairborne, GM of the Cardinals. Five days after the failed vote, Clairborn was replaced (related to this issue? I dunno) by Whitey Herzog, and the issue hasn't been brought to the table since.
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Ceetar Apr 28 2015 08:35 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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It's absolutely why this is an issue. Offense is down and it's starting to become a hot button issue. Pitchers are failing to hit at historic levels. Pitchers get hurt all the time, and plenty of times it's at the plate. Bumgarner is in the minority that sees it as part of his job. The other's don't. If this happened 20 years ago no one would be taking the complains seriously but because there is almost no value being added by pitcher's batting, it gets traction. It's an opportunity for everyone, and yet no one is taking it. Maybe the Dodgers, who did alright last year, but that could've easily been a fluke. I don't exactly have Sandy or Terry's ear though. Given control, sure, I'd rather the pitchers care about hitting than the DH, but given the state of the game right now, gimme the DH and stop with this farce.
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Nymr83 Apr 28 2015 08:44 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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If Jonathan Niese suffers the Wainwright injury we arent discussing the DH in the NL right now, just like if Anthony Recker had been the guy to get hurt instead of Posey. So if Mike Trout runs into a wall and gets hurt do we decide that the Ivy needs to get chopped down at Wrigley and replaced with a 5-foot thick padding?
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Apr 28 2015 08:46 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Yes.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 08:50 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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"Absolutely"? I don't think you mean to use that word. I fear you're too caught up in your own agenda to actually read what's going on. This discussion was clearly triggered by two pitchers getting hurt.
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Ceetar Apr 28 2015 08:58 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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That's the trigger, not the reason.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 08:59 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Absolutely.
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Benjamin Grimm Apr 28 2015 09:07 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Saying "pitchers should learn how to hit" seems a little facile to me. Not every top athlete can learn how to hit. (Didn't Michael Jordan have problems hitting in Double A?) It's just that when a first baseman or an outfielder can't hit, he doesn't get anywhere near the big leagues, even if he's good with the glove. But a pitcher who can't hit will still advance because nobody ever cut a pitcher because he couldn't hit a breaking ball.
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Ceetar Apr 28 2015 09:11 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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And Rey Ordonez made the majors too. But the lack of hitting still hurts the team.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Apr 28 2015 09:15 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
If you limited your pitcher (catcher, shortstop and center field) selections to those who could also hit excellently you'd have the worst pitching staff/defense in history, probably.
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d'Kong76 Apr 28 2015 09:31 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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HEY! No playing the Rey card!
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Ceetar Apr 28 2015 09:36 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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He could've used a Designated Hitter.
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Fman99 Apr 28 2015 10:32 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
I hope that's not the case.
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Edgy MD Apr 28 2015 10:43 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Expanding the rosters is another thing that protects people from the weaker part of their games, and so detracts from the human drama.
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Mets – Willets Point Apr 28 2015 01:53 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
Simple solution: The manager may elect to use one designated hitter in any game that begins on an odd-number day (local time). No designated hitter is permitted on games beginning on even-number days. This rule holds for the postseason as well as the regular season.
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Ashie62 Apr 28 2015 07:01 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Have you asked any AL fans?
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batmagadanleadoff Apr 29 2015 10:47 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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This has always been my solution, too. Notwithstanding the DH issue though, I think MLB's due for a roster expansion anyway, given the dramatic impact pitch-counts have had on the game and rosters, essentially requiring teams to trim their bench from about seven position player subs to four or five. The reduced bench limits strategies maybe even more so than the DH itself. Roster construction in today's game is more crucial than ever, is my guess.
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Gwreck Apr 29 2015 11:14 AM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Another person on the correct side of this issue: Adam Wainwright says adding the DH to the National League is a stupid idea.
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d'Kong76 Apr 29 2015 06:55 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
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Booth talking about this too...
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Ceetar Apr 29 2015 07:18 PM Re: The DH in the National League? |
You know, part of the "so much more" strategy non-DH love is about running out of of players, something adding roster spots in exchange for dumping it in the AL would do damage too.
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