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re: How did the Pitching dramatically improve so quickly?

Posted on 6/28/23 at 9:52 pm to
Posted by WylieTiger
Member since Nov 2006
13160 posts
Posted on 6/28/23 at 9:52 pm to
The SEC zone went away and for the most part the wind blew in.
Posted by Srbtiger06
Member since Apr 2006
28306 posts
Posted on 6/28/23 at 10:05 pm to
quote:

The SEC zone went away


Reason 1a for me. Not gonna say every call was perfect the entire postseason run but you saw a much more realistic and consistent zone than we did regular season.

quote:

most part the wind blew in.


That helped in Omaha. We adjusted and pitch well.
Posted by MasterKnight
Louisiana
Member since Jan 2016
1137 posts
Posted on 6/28/23 at 11:23 pm to
This is the only answer that is needed.
Posted by Scoob
Near Exxon
Member since Jun 2009
20573 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 2:10 am to
quote:

The SEC zone went away and for the most part the wind blew in.
This.

SEC zone was very tight, once the hitters learned it, it became impossible to blow it past a guy unless you're Skenes level of good. You either give up meatballs, or you miss the plate, walk guys, and end up throwing meatballs with the bases full.

Combine this with a lot of newer parks, where things have been laid out to accentuate the offense (excite the fans and draw them in), and we saw a lot of guys get beat up bad.

Come to Omaha when the wind is blowing in, and with a looser strike zone, you get some calls that force the batters to swing at things they can't crush. And even when they do connect, if they put some loft under it, it's held inside the park. People whined about that, we saw what happens when it's blowing out. Popups sail over the fence. Contact hitters (like Morgan) and line drive hitters (like Skenes, etc) weren't really affected by that, especially since they were already good hitters to begin with (and White too, he can go down and get some nasty pitches).

As an aside, this is why I'm not so in favor of electronic strike zones. You eliminate any random change of zone that an umpire might have, technically every batter should be able to learn exactly what his zone is. It's the same no matter the park, no matter the pitcher. There are very few guys like Skenes that can straight overpower hitters, you'd start to see guys really tee off. That SEC zone might not be as 'tight' as we thought, it might be what is actually there.
Posted by Tiger in Texas
Houston, Texas
Member since Sep 2004
20936 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 8:01 am to
Have to agree, cannot exclude the fact the SEC umps were brutal & inconsistent!!
Posted by thunderbird1100
GSU Eagles fan
Member since Oct 2007
68677 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 8:17 am to
quote:

The SEC zone went away and for the most part the wind blew in.



A lot of this, plus the park was gigantic in Omaha. It's a pitchers venue - except for our last 2 games there.

But also the pitchers themselves just made big pitches when they had to.
Posted by Grizzlybear_23
Member since Apr 2023
24 posts
Posted on 6/29/23 at 8:28 am to
Yea, I agree with the SEC strike zone going away but it actually benefited us. It taught us to aim small and miss small so whenever we got to Omaha the kids were having a field day
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