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Hit & Run
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In Tom Tippett's now-defunct blog on diamond-mind.com , he looked at the H&R. Firewall at work treats DMB as a "game" site, so is blocked. If someone can look for it, and post a link, that'd be great.
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Sean Casey is a GDP machine.
He is a perfect example of the sabermetric notion that a K is not always the worst possible outcome.
As a Met fan, I can testify that Mike Piazza used to do this all the time. In certain situations, he was just too good of a hitter for his own good, fighting off a tough pitch and hitting a hard grounder right at somebody with a runner on first.
I think the higher GDP totals are something you just have to take along with a slow footed .300 hitter...
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Many managers are sketchy about sending a runner when you have one of today's free swinging hackers at the plate.
I have no clue about any formulas, but hit and runs should generally come on fastball counts. 2-0, 2-1, 3-1.
Imo, managers would be wise to put more hit and runs on, even with 2 strikes, as it causes even the biggest hackers to cut down their swing and focus on making contact.
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Hit & Run
Sean Casey has grounded into three Double Plays this season. He always was ahead in the count when he hit the ball. Everytime i would have sent the runner on first.
So I wondered is there a formula to determine when you should sent the runner on a certain hitter (with a "Hit & Run Count")
This formula would contain something like K/AB, GIDP/AB, Groundball Rate etc.
I would like to focus on the hitter here. So we know when hitters like Casey, Pudge or A.J. Pierzynski are up with a runner on first a Hit & Run might be in order.
Any Ideas?Tags: None
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