awesome: I've never liked intentional walks. While checking out your post's information I came across a link to a book about various strategies employed in baseball called "The Book". I'll have to see about acquiring it. There's pros and cons to putting someone on base. It certainly gives the batter that's after the guy that receives the intentional walk incentive to get a hit. They're showing him up by saying they'd rather pitch to him than the guy they walked. And if he does get a hit, the guy that was intentionally walked is an extra man on base.
I've never seen a wild pitch during an intentional walk, but I've seen a couple of wild throws that almost got past the catcher.
I would like to see a team get punished for intentionally walking a player by having the pitcher throw a wild pitch during the intentional walk and the winning run scores...
Assunto: Re: Intentional Base on Balls commonly known as an Intentional Walk
Modificado por Walter Montego (5. Setembro 2007, 07:26:50)
awesome: IT figures it'd be Buck Showalter, the same guy that used to manage the Texas Rangers that had Bonds walked. I'll have to check into it. Yep, it looks like you're right. There's no mention of Babe Ruth getting a bases loaded intentional walk. I found an article that has five of them being done and a good explanation of the intentional walk. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intentional_base_on_balls
I probably heard the guy mention Babe Ruth when it was done to Bonds and thought that he knew what he was talking about. Thanks for straightening me out on that. :)
Assunto: Re: Intentional Base on Balls commonly known as an Intentional Walk
Tuesday: Yes, it is a fairly common tactic though the scenario you have outlined is not. As far as I know, only two batters have ever been intentionally walked with the bases loaded. Barry Bonds and Babe Ruth.
It is quite common for a team to walk any batter, not just a home run hitting power hitter, with a man on second or men on second and third, to set up force outs at the bases to prevent the lead runners from scoring or advancing on a ground ball in the infield. Of course the manager of the defense will take into consideration the score, the inning, who's scheduled to bat, who's available to pinch hit, and other factors when deciding to do this. It really backfires if the following batter gets a hit.
Arsenal 3-1 Portsmouth Aston Villa 2-0 Chelsea Blackburn 1-0 Man City
Saturday, 01 September 2007
Bolton 1-2 Everton Fulham 3-3 Tottenham Liverpool 6-0 Derby Man Utd 1-0 Sunderland Middlesbrough 2-0 Birmingham Newcastle 1-0 Wigan Reading 0-3 West Ham
Well done to Mark, today who had a cracking first round at the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles, laying joint 5th, one shot ahead of Colin Montgomery
Well if there is a post off my screen that may contain a long link, it will stretch your screen though i do always try to fix them if they are, BUT i did think that there was a built in scroll bar now, or maybe that only work for Firefox
What's a Z-Score? The z-score is a statistical measure of how a particular number compares to the average. Technically it is the number of standard deviations from the mean, but one need not have a complete mathematical understanding of the z-score to appreciate that it shows how a given player performs compared to the competition.
For example, if the league average for home runs is 9 and a player hits exactly 9 home runs, his z-score is zero. If he hits more than 9 HRs his z-score will be positive and if he hits fewer than 9 it will be negative. Precisely how positive and how negative will depend on how other players in the league fared. For example:
In the National League in 2001 the league average for home runs was about 12. The leaders: Barry Bonds 73 Sammy Sosa 64 Luis Gonzalez 57 Several others also exceeded 40. Bonds' HR z-score was +5.20. In the American League in 1920 the league average for home runs was about 4. The leaders: Babe Ruth 54 George Sisler 19 Tilly Walker 19 Happy Felsch 17 Nobody else exceeded 12. Ruth hit nearly three times as many HRs as anyone else (in fact, he alone hit more than any team beside the Yankees), so his HR z-score was +8.45 which shows mathematically what we see intuitively: that his performance was more dominant than that of Bonds in 2001.
"Babe's records for most home runs in a season (60) and a career (714) have been broken, but he still has tremendous staying power among the all-time statistical leaders. He ranks third in home runs, second in at-bats-per-home-run (11.76), second in RBI (2,211), first in slugging percentage (.690), and third in walks (2,062), and he is tied for ninth in batting average (.342). But if there is one statistic that proves Ruth was the greatest of them all, it is this: He was 94-46 with a 2.28 ERA as a pitcher."
In one the articles in this series I read that he and Lou Gehrig combined did indeed hit 1 in 4 of the homeruns in the league one year. Amazing!
I just heard something that is amazing, in the 30's Babe Ruth hit 10 to 12 % of all home runs in the league for 5 years straight, when this is calculated out for today and figuring in the expansion of the league, for someone to do that today, they would have to hit 288 home runs a year for 5 years in a row
The new Premier League season starts Today, 90 days after the last campaign ended with Manchester United taking the title from Chelsea.
In the intervening period more than £350m has been spent as clubs desperate for success search for the winning formula.
But for all the money that the likes of Liverpool and Tottenham have lavished on new faces, it is United and Chelsea who start the season once again as most people's favourites for the title.
With Uefa Cup places also up for grabs and new boys Birmingham, Derby and Sunderland desperate to preserve their top-flight status it promises to be a fascinating season.
For myself, go Arsenal, you have won 2 Trophy's already inthe warm up Tournaments.You can do it
Jim Dandy: That's a good point if what we're seeing is right. But it may be an optical illusion stemming from style & color uniform differences between the San Francisco Giants & the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Jim Dandy: That's an interesting article and there's little to argue from a numbers perspective. Both are giants of the game. But because baseball is a numbers game, Bonds' steroid use is critical. And his power numbers (as well as his head, shoe size & weight) inflated dramatically in his later years, when a normal player is past his prime. I have to wonder why he's playing, and why we're discussing these things & articles are being written what, in a better world, would not be taking place at all. For me, like so many other things in our society, baseball has been corrupted & now holds little interest for me. I keep up with Maddux. lol