DGS49
Diamond Member
Baseball people generally cite the improvement in relief pitchers, specifically, the number of such pitchers who can throw the ball upwards of 100 mph and beyond. In the Old Days, once you got past the fifth inning you were facing either a tiring starter whom you had seen twice before in the game, or a weaker reliever. Now there is little drop in performance by pitching as the game goes on.
I personally think it's a change in HITTING philosophy - one that explains the explosion of K's over the past few years.
The batters no longer shorten their swing with two strikes. They go for it all regardless of the count. It results in lower batting averages but theoretically more runs over the course of a whole season.
Other opinions?
I personally think it's a change in HITTING philosophy - one that explains the explosion of K's over the past few years.
The batters no longer shorten their swing with two strikes. They go for it all regardless of the count. It results in lower batting averages but theoretically more runs over the course of a whole season.
Other opinions?