Showing posts with label aluminium bats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aluminium bats. Show all posts

Sunday, July 18, 2010

PING! – I think I just had a good idea!



Towards the end of every week, the Defensive Specialist makes a special effort to sort through the masses of emails that flood into the Deep in the Hole inbox. It’s a laborious task but it gives the Defensive Specialist a chance to tune into what the readers are thinking. Meticulously working through each email, the Defensive Specialist encounters hate mail, fan mail, marriage proposals, requests for advice and from time to time some solid little rumours that make for interesting thought.

Last week the Defensive Specialist stumbled across one such nugget from a chap going by the name of Victorian Flamethrower. Here’s what he had to say:

 Defensive Specialist,

Thought you might like to know that apparently your beloved WA / Perth State league competition is about to be announced as a tin bat league after a president’s vote in the last few days. It was said that wood bats have made baseball boring and tin is the way to revive it.

Apparently there will be restrictions on pro and ex pro guys using tin.

Interesting decision when the ABL, a wood league is about to start.

I’m sure your skills as a word wizz will be able to write a masterpiece.

Cheers.

Thank you

Victorian Flamethrower.

Of course the Defensive Specialist spent at least 30 minutes trying to figure out who the author was since no one has come out of Victoria throwing hard in quite some time! After deciding that the author must be playing a gag with the name, the Defensive Specialist began to chew over the core of the email.

Why on earth would a state association decide to go back to metal bats at their top level? Especially now with the all-wood ABL set to launch and the use of wooden bats firmly entrenched for at least 5 years?

The Defensive Specialist decided to ask the Victorian Flamethrower for his thoughts:

I think it’s a joke, it will be detrimental to the kids trying to make it and goes against the ABL’s efforts to grow the sport and develop kids / young men into solid pro guys. I agree it’s exciting but I think it may be dangerous after so many years of wood/composite. I wouldn’t want to throw my 90mph fastball to a Lachie Dale or Trent D’Antonio let alone Pat Maat, Luke Hughes or a Kennelly brother. Furthermore if they impose restrictions on pro guys or ex pro guys it becomes an unlevel playing field, games will be 15-25 blowouts, 3 + hours.

The Defensive Specialist was quick to add that the decision will serve to discourage a 17-year-old from taking the ball at that level for fear of giving up screaming line drives and 10 run innings.

The Victorian Flamethrower responded:

I completely agree, huge discouragement for a youngster, especially coming out of juniors where his 82mph is legit, it’s BP with tin. It also takes away the inside part of the plate and will encourage kids to pitch around, there will be no focus on strike/ ball ratios, 3 pitch or less counts or pitching to the hole (a philosophy of essentially pitching to between the shin guards of the catcher -lower part of the strike zone being our focus but the hole is also wherever your out pitch is expected to go, high and tight or bounced on the plate etc).

So the first thing the Defensive Specialist did was look into whether the ruling had been passed. Short of calling the league office (ok, it was lazy journalism to not do so), the general consensus was that the idea is yet to be voted on, but will definitely be tabled. The second thing the Defensive Specialist did was wonder why on earth such a decision would be made.

The statement that the game is boring and that metal bats will help revive it is a bit rich for a number of reasons. 1) The only people showing up to watch a state league baseball game other than parents are long-term club members. These people show up no matter what the players are swinging. Introducing 18-10 run ballgames is not going to see people flooding to local baseball fields to take in all the action. 2) If people want to see fireworks, show up for batting practice. High scoring games happen from time to time but if you enable good hitters even further by equipping them with metal light sabres, you are inevitably going to see pitchers nibbling more (in order to avoid solid contact) which will increase walks and guarantee that games drag on for longer. A 4 hour baseball game is not exciting unless its 1-1 in the top of the 14th inning with the go ahead run on second.

The decision to go away from wood is strange when you consider that we’re about to see the ABL launch. The state league may be somewhat depleted with players moving up to the ABL but it is also a feeder league to that competition. Why have players using a tool that they will not have access to at the higher level? Additionally the under 18 state team uses wood. Now all of a sudden we have our best kids using aluminium bats all season and then switch to wood for that tournament? Not the best preparation in any way shape or form.

There is an argument that perhaps kids are being lost to the game because they are having less success using wooden bats. So you arm those kids with metal and all of a sudden they can hit a fisted ball over second base for a rinky dink single. Is that what we want? And what about the young pitchers? As discussed above, imagine a 17-year-old kid and his 82 mph fastball going up against some of the better hitters in the league who’d feast on that with wooden bats let alone metal bats. The local baseball field ends up looking like an artillery zone as good hitters start teeing off. So a few young hitters feel better about themselves. What about the young pitchers?
The Defensive Specialist has had a really tough time coming up with any good reason to make the switch. It must be said however that one of the key decision-makers at Baseball WA is Geoff Hooker who also happens to own the number one baseball store in the state. After some cursory research, the Defensive Specialist found that composite wooden bats currently retail for $335. On the other hand, the higher quality Easton metal bats are on sale for $495- $525. It is safe to say that both the composite wood and the metal bats are good for about one season. So right off the bat (faster if the bat happens to be aluminium), it is fairly obvious that there is a significant financial windfall for Hooker and his business if this decision goes through*.

*Now before we all pile on to Hooker and Fielders Choice (his store), it should be acknowledged that he and his business have been MASSIVE supporters of baseball in Western Australia and his contributions shouldn’t be understated or undersold.

It just all seems like a backwards step to the Defensive Specialist. The ABL is a professional league that will have young players excited about baseball and aspiring to reach that level and beyond. We want young kids to flock to ABL games and beg their parents to sign them up for baseball. By the time they demonstrate the skill and ability to play at the highest level it’s time to separate the men from the boys anyway. Why give them false hope with metal bats when they should be measuring themselves with wood? Why would lessening the baseball at the level below the ABL be a good thing for the game? Why make it easier for the hitters and tougher for the pitchers?

As you can see, the Defensive Specialist has a lot of questions. If you have the answers, the Defensive Specialist is all ears…..