I’d rather see a few pitchers embarrass themselves than sit through a dozen pitching changes in late innings. Maybe if scouts valuing accuracy again over raw speed this wouldn’t be such an issue. Imma start calling these Seabiscuit moments. As in, “wow, he sure is fast.” “Yeah, in every direction.”
The White Sox are just clueless. They renamed an area of Comiskey that was honoring a concession worker who’d worked there for 50 years after Tony La Russa
How stupid can you be? Name one of the beer vending areas after La Russa if you must.
I love the Cards’ manager’s defense of his pitcher who evidently had a glop of sunscreen on his cap. Why, he was just worried about melanoma!
That’s exactly what I do when going out in the sun, load up the brim of my cap with sunscreen. I’d never think of, you know, smearing it on exposed skin.
“Name one of the beer vending areas after La Russa if you must.”
Is it just me, or is MLB (or MLB reporting) following the general US trend towards real life turning into a parody of so-called “reality” TV that itself was/is supposed to be a parody of the crazier / stupider parts of real life?
Did Schildt say Cabrera was using the sunscreen for sun protection? I think the gist of his comments were that every pitcher in baseball uses sunscreen and rosin to enhance their grip, and the league basically allows it (his “dirty little secret” comment).
It is the “other” substances like the stuff powerlifters use that the league is trying to crack down on because it creates abnormal spin rates, which can be detected via StatCast and the like. I believe I read that Cabrera’s spin rates before and after he changed caps were identical.
“Here’s the deal. First of all, Gio wears the same hat all year. Hats accrue dirt. Hats accrue substances. … Did Gio have some sunscreen at some point in his career to make sure he doesn’t get some kind of melanoma? Possibly.”
“You want to police some sunscreen and rosin? Go ahead. Get every single person in this league. … Why don’t you start with the guys that are cheating with some stuff that’s really impacting the game?”
He’s absolutely right. What the league needs to do is provide all the MLB-approved rosin and sunscreen that pitchers want, and let them go hog-wild with it. That’s not the problem.
And yes, I agree with @Munch. Hopefully Schildt was correct that it was just sunscreen and MLB comes up with a policy and procedure that makes sense and is enforceable to get the other substances out of the game.
Let’s just say that basically every pitcher is using something, and Trevor Bauer has basically admitted that he has tested more exotic substances in order to add 200-400 RPM to his spin rates. You can see it even in-game where he used something in the first inning and then stopped.
Baseball really has to decide what they are going to do, if anything, about this. Because a system in which everybody cheats (at least according to the written rules) and only a small handful are challenged is not healthy.
It would be so, so easy to fix this. You randomly check and hand out a 50-game suspension to the pitcher and his manager and pitching coach. It’d stop very swiftly.
Sure, but I think the main point Schildt (and others) have made is that the league doesn’t really want to eliminate all foreign substances. They believe that the sunscreen+rosin combo helps grip but doesn’t significantly improve spin rates and pitcher performance - it just reduces HBP and wildness.
It’s the more esoteric and advanced substances they are trying to police. But of course the rule doesn’t make a distinction, so it seems they are trying to collect enough data about the effects of various substances to come up with an “approved formula” that achieves the good part of grip enhancement without the crazy spin rates that Bauer, Cole, etc seem to have gained from using whatever they came up with in the lab.
As a Dodgers fan I cringe every time I read this stuff. I’m not emotionally invested in him as a player so I can accept he may be dirty I just worry that without the aid we may have just wildly overpaid for a player.
Will Craig of the Pirates today had one of the most bone-headed plays I’ve ever seen. And judging from Twitter, one of the most bone-headed anyone has ever seen and will ever see again.
With two outs, Javier Báez hits a routine grounder to third. The throw to first pulls Craig off the bag, but he’s still standing between 1st and the runner. Instead of stepping back on the bag, Craig starts slowly trotting down the first base line while Báez stays just out of reach. Meanwhile, the runner from 2nd has rounded the bases and comes home. If you’re Craig, do you 1) just tag Báez, 2) throw back to the 2nd baseman covering 1st, or 3) make a high toss to the catcher, standing him up so he can’t make the tag on the runner?
Craig chose (3), and the play actually gets worse from there.
The amazing thing is that for a split-second even the announcers seemed to think that Craig had to get the batter/runner out quickly. But he didn’t. It doesn’t matter at all if the runner from second scores, because there were 2 outs. If the batter doesn’t make it to first base before there are three outs then no runs score on the play. Craig could have literally stood there with the ball and just tagged Baez whenever.
And even then, if the Pirates second baseman actually had covered first like he should have they still would have gotten the out and the run wouldn’t have counted. But then again, why would you think you needed to cover first since the batter literally cannot go anywhere else and the idea that your first baseman wouldn’t know that is rather inconceivable.