Arizona's Finest
Your My Favorite Mistake
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8 walks and 149 pitches???
I'll take it. Congrats Edwin and Dbacks!
I'll take it. Congrats Edwin and Dbacks!
This proves a point about a theory I have. The worst thing to happen to baseball in this era is the pitch count. I remember as a kid pitches commonly threw complete games. Pitchers are too pampered. Instead of seeing a better starting pitcher we see a mediocre ot terrible reliever finish games. Congratulations to Edwin.
This proves a point about a theory I have. The worst thing to happen to baseball in this era is the pitch count. I remember as a kid pitchers commonly threw complete games. Pitchers are too pampered. Instead of seeing a better starting pitcher we see a mediocre or terrible reliever finish games. Congratulations to Edwin.
100% agree
30 or so years ago, pitchers would throw 10 complete games/season and the team would only have a 4 man rotation. 125+ pitches was not taboo back then. In addition to the pitch count, the establishment of the "save" and "hold" stats really hampered the impact of a starter.
For pitchers who make millions/year and play once every 5 days, they need to be working harder IMO.
Edwin Jackson's no-no
If you had told D-backs manager A.J. Hinch on Friday that by the end of the day, his starting pitcher would throw 149 pitches, "I would have bet my life savings against that," Hinch said Saturday.
"I was very focused on the history. This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity."
Hinch's decision really came down to a conversation with Jackson and Arizona pitching coach Mel Stottlemyre Jr. after the seventh inning. Jackson's pitch count was at 117, and Hinch asked Jackson and Stottlemyre to go out of the dugout so that the three of them could talk about the situation out of sight of the cameras.
Jackson argued to stay in the game, to continue on. "[Beep] it, I'm going out there until I give up a hit or the game is in jeopardy," Jackson said. And Hinch stressed as they talked that this wasn't only about a no-hitter but also about trying to win the game. And so Hinch had his mind made up that the instant Jackson allowed a hit, he'd pull him immediately. Yet, he wanted to give him the opportunity to finish the no-hitter.
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A.J. Hinch had some serious discussions to make during Edwin Jackson's no-no, and he knew that.
"Once I sent him out for the eighth inning, I was pretty much committed to riding out" the no-hit bid, Hinch said.
The D-backs' manager also believes that there is a lot about Jackson that makes him a candidate to throw a lot of pitches: He has a really clean arm and a clean delivery, and he's very athletic.
"Last year, when I first got this job, I was zeroed in on this 100 to 105 pitch count, almost to a fault," Hinch said. This year, Hinch has tried to adjust that, looking to get pitchers to aim for 115-pitch outings, because that number will get them an extra inning of work.
But Hinch is also aware of the inherent pressures that weigh on a manager as he assesses pitch counts and the possible risk of leaving pitchers in the game too long. "What gets instilled in the managers is how difficult it is to replace pitching," Hinch said. "With expansion, with the dilution of pitching, it might be a cliff dive to the next wave of pitching available to you."
Because of that, managers routinely are conservative in protecting their pitchers. As Friday's game progressed, however, standard operating procedure went out the window. As that game moved into the last innings, Hinch and Stottlemyre talked about how the Diamondbacks have an off day coming up, how they could bump back Jackson's next start to give him some extra rest in the aftermath of his monumental effort.
"It was a little gut-wrenching," said Hinch, who is well aware of the vortex he stepped into with his decision.
"If I hadn't sent him out for the eighth inning, I'd be the villain, the most hated man in baseball. If he comes up [hurt] in the next month, I'm going to get crushed."
The Diamondbacks decided to push back Jackson's next start to give him some extra rest.
The biggest problem isn't really pitch counts, it is how kids today are being trained. Pitchers need to be throwing long distances, like 200 to 300 feet. You need to stregthen up the arm which is no longer happeninging. Nolan Ryan is trying to change the ways out in Texas which is just fantastic to see. Hopefully he can change every team.
I agree - I think the pitch counts are more of a symptom than the disease
kids are putting more and more stress on their arms at younger ages for a longer duration
you now have kids pitching year around, learning more taxing pitches at younger ages, etc
also, hitting has become so advanced that pitchers need to have multiple pitches that they can throw effectively from a consistent motion and arm slot (as to not tip your pitches) .... all of this adds more and more stress
I agree. As soon as the bullpen exposed itself this season I would have gone old school and had all of the starters pitch longer...even complete games. It is ridiculous how many games we have lost after great starting pitching...