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DEFENSIVE QUOTATIONS:
The following quotations can be heard in every baseball park at
any time.
These are at the heart of baseball philosophy.
1. Prevent the big inning.
2. "If you hold them scoreless, I
promise you a tie"
said the offensive
coach to the defensive coach!
3. We cannot lose if we do not let them
score.
4. In 65% of games, more runs are scored
by the winning team in one inning
than the losing team
scores in the entire game.
5. Pitching is 75% of the game.
6. Pitching is 80% of the game.
7. Pitching is 90% of the game.
8. "Who is the toughest hitter you
ever faced?" Anyone with a bat!
9. The pitcher is the fifth infielder and
protects the center of the diamond
.
10. The pitcher, when he completes his pitch to
home plate, is only 54 feet
from the hitter. He better have his
glove ready.
11.
You must be good defensively up the middle.
12. All championship teams have a great
defensive catcher.
13. More errors are made by third basemen than
any other position.
14. The first baseman makes the rest of the
infielders look good.
15. That outfield can really go get them.
16. Every one on every play is in the right
position.
17. They never beat themselves.
18. Their pre-game infield practice is really
impressive.
19. They really play with a great deal of
pride.
20. Did you see that team hustle on and off the
field?
21. Keep the runner off first base.
22. Keep the runner off third base.
THE IMPORTANCE OF RUNNERS AT THIRD BASE
To elaborate on the last quotation, it is one of
the fundamental ideas in baseball philosophy. The importance of
runners on third base is often overlooked by coaches. Some runners
cause havoc when they reach third; they dance off the base, threaten
to steal or to pull a suicide squeeze, and generally cause the
opponent to lose hair and sleep. However, every runner on third base
is far more likely to score than a runner on second base. Keeping
runners off third base must be an important key to the team's
defensive philosophy, (and a fundamental part of the team's
offensive philosophy should be to get runners to third base).
To illustrate the importance of keeping runners off third, here
is a list of 24 ways in which a runner can score from third base but
not from second base.
If there are more, please write and inform me.
A runner can score from third base but not
second base on...
1. A balk.
2. A catcher's
interference.
3. A wild pitch.
4. A passed ball.
5. A hard hit ground
ball through the infield and directly in front of an outfielder.
6. An error by an
infielder which eludes him by more than ten feet.
7. A short pop-up just
beyond the infield that is dropped by a fielder.
8. A short line drive
or a bloop single just over the infield.
9. A sacrifice fly.
10. A fly ball dropped by an
outfielder.
11. A fair pop-up dropped by an
infielder with two outs.
12. A walk or a hit batter with the
bases full.
13. On a wild throw by the catcher
back to the pitcher.
14. A ground ball, early in the
game with runners on
first and
third, no outs, and the defense decides to
go for
the double play. (Note: So you think this
play
is inconsequential? This play occurred in the
third
inning of a scoreless game during the 1959
World
Series, allowing the Chicago White Sox to
score
the first run of the game against Sandy
Koufax and the Los Angeles Dodgers. The White
Sox
won the game by the score of 1 to 0.)
15. A wild throw by the pitcher
attempting to pick the runner off third base.
16. A wild throw by the pitcher
attempting to pick a runner off first base.
17. A wild throw by the catcher
attempting to pick the runner off third base.
18. A wild throw by the catcher
attempting to throw out a runner trying to
steal second base.
19. A dropped throw from the
catcher on an attempted steal of second base.
20. With runners on first and
third, less than two outs,
the
runner on first heads for second base; the catcher throws to the
cutoff man who makes a wild throw back to the catcher.
21. A suicide squeeze bunt.
22. A steal of home.
23. A wild throw by an infielder
attempting to throw the batter out at first base.
24. An interference by an infielder
during a rundown play on the runner at third.
(Note:
Although the runner may be heading back toward third base when
interference occurs, he is nevertheless permitted to score because an
obstructed
runner is awarded at least one base beyond the base he last
legally
touched.) |