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Batspeed - and Jeff Clement

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SABR Matt's picture
Submitted by SABR Matt on

But the scouts are going to read something like that on Clement and tell the pitchers: "Clement isn't going to cheat on the fastball, so don't try throwing slop to him on the first pitch" and guess what...Clement is going to be behind 0-1 a lot because he's taking that first fastball.

He'll need to adjust and try to guess at least a LITTLE when the fastball might be coming...if he doesn't start guessing a LITTLE, he'll never hit consistently in the majors.

glmuskie's picture
Submitted by glmuskie on

Great point Matt (and great post Dr.D).

Here is where Edgar was so great. He'd gladly watch a pitcher groove FB strike one to get a look at the pitcher's delivery and get his one good eye : ) accustomed to reading the pitch. But he'd punish that pitch often enough that pitchers just could not feel comfortable doing it.

Edgar would occasionally look flat silly swinging behind a FB. I recall reading that this was sometimes due to his eye condition. But it could also be he was just fooled by a pitcher, or he guessed wrong.

Matt is right about batters guessing... It's like counting cards in blackjack. If pitcher x in situation Y is going to throw a fastball 90% of the time, you'd better be looking fastball.

I'm with Matt also that much of Clement's problems last year were due to his knee. Looking forward to seeing how he develops in 09.

misterjonez's picture

Great write-up on Clement's approach as a hitter. It really is rare to see this approach outside of the extreme TTO guys, and even many/most of them fall into the trap of cheating fastball too often.

Jack Cust is another guy who looks like he simply does not care how his AB looks. We've seen him turn around inside fastballs in the mid/high-nineties for 430' moonshots, and we've seen him take breaking balls away over the left field wall. He strikes out so much because he really is looking to destroy every pitch, and his recognition is great. He *never* goes up there thinking "Well, it's two strikes now, so I guess I'd better shorten up and look to punch a single up the middle." He uses the same swing on every pitch. He just doesn't care if he misses - irregardless of pitch type.

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