Friday, May 27, 2011
Keeping your batting order static
Players, we are told, love to know their exact role. They want to know the one position on the field they’ll play, they want to know the one inning they are brought out of the pen, they want to know how many pitches they are allowed to throw, and they want to know the one lineup slot they’ll occupy.
So, if you have Drew Stubbs leading off, and Joey Votto always batting third, and you have Jay Bruce always batting fifth, then when the cleanup slot opens up for a day, it’s easier to simply slot someone else there. The Reds for example started the season with Scott Rolen there. Rolen of course is not the healthiest of players, and so, we’d expect that slot to open up. And when it did, Jonny Gomes filled in.
But then, Dusty Baker decided he needed to have a new static lineup, given that Rolen was out. So, he puts Brandon Phillips as his cleanup hitter, moving Jay Bruce to second, and then Gomes + whoever rotating in the 5th slot. Presumably, he figures, better to have the rotation in the 5th slot than the 4th slot.
He had enough of that, so then he moved Bruce back to the 5th slot, keeping Phillips as cleanup, and making the 2nd slot the rotating slot. So, we are now here: Stubbs still and always leadoff, Votto still and always third, Phillips the permanent replacement at cleanup until Rolen comes back, and Bruce reinstalled at fifth. The second slot being the rotating slot, you have Renteria there, and Paul Janish(!).
Then, Rolen came back, but he’s eased into the sixth slot (which was Cairo’s semi-permament slot).
Finally, he’s given back his cleanup slot, Phillips is given back his #2 slot, and now we are finally back to where we started the season.
Except now, Rolen again didn’t play, and so, Baker wanting to keep his lineup fixed, simply rotated in the third baseman (Cairo) into the cleanup slot.
Does all this make sense? Who knows. But, why is it important to give the great player a fixed role, while rotating the lesser players around the 6th through 8th slots (presumably, I didn’t check, to break up lefty/righty based on opposing pitcher)?
If anyone needs confidence, it’s the lesser players. Does Joey Votto really need to know he has to bat third, regardless of the context? Is his ego that fragile? Or, is Votto so confident since he first picked up a baseball bat that he’s prepared to hit anywhere in the lineup, and be awesome doing so?
Do we need real pyschologists weighing in here, or is dime-store pyschology what we need?
Reference: B-R.com