I don't know. You make it sound like a batter can go up there and hit a 95 mph baseball whenever and wherever he wants to, except and unless he tries to put lift into it?
Hitting a round ball with a rounded bat is difficult enough. That's not the point.
The problem is trying to pinpoint the contact point of a ball thrown horizontally
with a vertical swing. It reduces the odds of control massively. Which is why we
see so many harmless pop flies that don't advance runners.
I would much rather watch my favorite team make a line drive into the gap in
either left-center or right-center their go-to swing. And, if they have home run
capability, choose their pitch and consider what best fits the situation.
Single-double-single or double-single-double scores two runs and puts a runner
on base, somewhat diverting the pitcher's attention.
Solo HR's are actually rally killers, which give pitchers a chance to regroup.
Let's face it. A line drive doesn't give a fielder a high chance of getting to the
ball. "Lift" gives the fielder plenty of time to get to the ball, if it doesn't reach
the seats. From a physics standpoint, lift is a low percentage attempt.
Look how many good hitters are hitting in the low .100's. We've never seen
that before. .150 is the new .225. And .225 is the new .270.
As I've posted, "lift" is a phenomenon which has taken over baseball (just as
steroids did). Its time will eventually pass. I would rather see the manager of
my hometown team be a trend setter rather than a follower.
Add to it the stubbornness of constantly hitting into the shift, which gives
the pitcher a huge advantage. Take what they give you!
No, a batter cannot go up there and "hit a 95 mph baseball whenever and
wherever he wants". All the more reason for batters to take back control
rather than swing for all-or-nothing.
The only way it will change is if managers lead the way. It's their job!
As a fan, that is my preference. Versus games becoming home run hitting
contests. Just as watching the NBA become 3-point contests every time
down the floor. Boring! Just as our society has become obsessed with
instant gratification.
The D-backs roster is not a team of sluggers who can hit 40 HR's. A good
manager fits his strategy to his team's strengths, which Torey has not.
The result is our recent streak of losing 20 out of 24 games. That's the
proof!