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Re: Re: Mac, Davis and Strawberry


Posted by: Doug () on Sun Apr 18 17:13:28 2004


>>> Davis .269, Mac .263 and Strawberry at .259 are not in the great catagory as hitters. Brett was a great hitter, and I can't find any tape of him hitting and outside corner pitch into the seats in right field. The pitch I am talking about is the pitch on the outside corner, not the outside middle. A ball hit to straight away left or right is what I consider a pulled ball......not a foot to the left or right of second base. <<<
>
> Hi Doug
>
> Your question to me was, “Other than Bonds when he stood on the plate, who else pulls balls a long way that are outside corner pitches?” You did not ask for hitters with high batting averages that pulled outside pitches. Williams and Brett pulled for distance and their averages were about as high as they come. – Of all the hitters in my study (300+), Brett consistently hit the hardest line drives to all fields. When he got elevation on the ball – it really went. One of his home runs to dead centerfield cleared 410 feet in less kvideo frames than any other swing I charted.
>
> Doug, the pitches I charted that were pulled for long home runs were on the outer edge of the strike zone. They were not pulled down the line or even to the power alleys. They were a few degrees left or right of straightaway (more left or right center).
>
> Jack Mankin

Jack, I guess the only thing that we will agree on in this subject is that George Brett is a great hitter. He is the guy who I have studied more than any other, and even named my son after him.
Doug




>


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This is known as hitting for the cycle in a game?
   Single, double, triple, homerun
   Four singles
   Three homeruns
   Three stikeouts

   
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