Sure thing AZCB34, anything to generate discussion:
There are several reasons I've seen for the extingueshing of the DH, so I'll address some of them and offer a counter.
WARNING: I don't profess these ideas to be truely original. I have formed my opinions based on arguements I've heard and read.
DH's are 1-dimentional players
Well yes, they can be. I won't argue against it. Baseball is filled with 1-dimentional players. Hell, baseball is filled with 1/2-dimentional players. If offense is one dimention and defense (and pitching) is another, then what is situational offense (pinch hitter/runner) or situational defense (LOOGY, closer)? Is that not 1/2 a dimention?
Last year our 12 man bullpen had a total of 3 ABs.
DH's aren't always 1-dimentional anyways. The DH position gives a team a lot of flexibility in how they chose to use it. Just because it is a 1-dimentional role does not mean that only 1-dimentional players can fill it (see Durham, Ray).
NL Pitchers have an advantage in interleague play and the WS
Well let's compare the two leagues in 2002:
Code:
Lg AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO IBB HBP SH SF BA OBP SLUG OPS
AL 281 14 38 5 0 0 9 1 0 12 121 0 0 25 1 .135 .170 .153 .323
NL 4864 276 709 128 7 23 287 1 2 176 1820 0 15 557 16 .146 .177 .189 .367
The numbers can speak for themselves, but I don't see any real advantage (or ability) that the NL pitchers have over AL pitchers and I think this shows how 1-dimentional MLB pitchers really are.
The NL is the "pure" way to play the game
It is?
There are two leagues in the world that I know of that force pitchers to hit: the NL and the Japanese Central League.
HS, College, Minors, Mexican Leagues, Japanese Pacific LEague, AL, etc.. all have the DH implemented. The only time pitchers hit in the minors is when two NL farm clubs meet up and they "agree" to have their pitchers hit.
This is basically saying "I won't use a DH if you won't"
If the NL is the right way to play the game, then we need to run out and tell the rest of the world.
The DH takes away strategy
This is the most common of reasoning and probably the longest to address. So I'm going to ask Bill James to help me here (lots of quotes). James wrote an article in his
Historical Baseball Abstract entitled: "1973: DH Rule Increases Strategy" (gasp!)
What the DH rule actually does…is to eliminate from the game a series of forced, obvious moves, which involve in fact no option on the part of either manager, and thus no strategy. You've got a .113 hitter at the plate. A runner on first, and nobody out in the fourth, and you have to bunt don't you? Where's the strategy? With a DH up there at least you can do something. You're down four runs in the seventh with the pitcher leading off, and you have to pinch hit for him, don't you? What's strategic about that? The DH rule saves the pinch hitters, and thus in effect makes the roster larger. As such it creates, not eliminates, strategic options for American League managers.
James backed this statement up by running a study to see how SAC hits and pinch hitters were used in the AL and NL from 1968 to 1986. James compares the standard deviation in the AL and NL in how these strategic tools are used and then compares the leagues to each other. What James discovered was that although they are used less in the AL, the situations they are used in vary much more than they do in the NL.
James sums up his thoughts in a way I couldn't put better myself:
What the truth comes down to here is, a question of in what does strategy reside? Does strategy exist in the act of bunting? If so, the Designated Hitter Rule has reduced strategy. But if strategy exists in the decision about when a bunt should be used, then the DH rule has increased the differences of opinion which exist about that question, and thus has increased strategy. But if strategy is an argument, then I would argue that there is more of a difference of opinion, not less, in the American League.
To add a personal observation of last nights game:
ARIZONA 3RD
-Bottom of the 3rd inning
-C Moeller singled to center.
-B Kim sacrificed to catcher, C Moeller to second.
-C Counsell grounded out to second, C Moeller to third.
-J Spivey struck out swinging.
0 runs, 1 hit, 0 errors
Florida 5, Arizona 0
This, to me, isn't strategy, it's desperation. I can't call it stupid because I don't know that BB had another option, but what good does a SAC do you when you're down 5 runs? The 7 pitchers in that game went 0-2 with 2 Ks and a SAC.
All of this isn't to convince the "purist" or "anti-DH" people to convert. It's just another point of view. I have no problems with people saying they prefer the pitcher hitting, I just don't like the questionable excuses as to why it makes the game better.
If you put all of these together (already 1-dimentional players in the NL, lack of offensive contribution of these players, practically every other league in the world uses DH, no increas in strategy and possibly a decrease) you can argue that the NL should be the league to change
its rules.