J-Roc wrote:I think we were all worried when Frasor came in.
You should be worried; runner on third, one out is a situation that more often than not leads to a run. When you have a guy like Crisp at the plate, who is a pretty good contact hitter (averages around 1 K per 7.6 PAs), you should be doubly worried, because the odds are in their favour.
That Frasor came in and struck Crisp out should inspire confidence, because he made a good contact hitter look silly in a high-leverage situation, but got unlucky. Then again, we're the sort that will berate a pitcher for "choking" if he gives up a broken-bat infield hit, or a batter who crushes a line drive right at the third baseman, because we're terribly silly people.
It was probably JPA's fault, but Frasor doesn't inspire confidence. I didn't see the highlight, but isn't a wild pitch a wild pitch.
No, a wild pitch isn't a wild pitch. As a rule of thumb, just about any ball that hits the ground before the catcher will be charged as a wild pitch...it takes an epic **** by the catcher to earn a passed ball. That doesn't mean that the catcher shouldn't have knocked it down; similarly, a fly ball that gets past an outfielder after he loses it in the lights (which would be scored a double/triple) is his mistake, not the pitcher's, even if it doesn't appear as such on the scoresheet.
As an example, look at Romero's league-leading eighteen wild pitches last year (at one point he was on pace to destroy the modern-day record). Some of them were genuine wild pitches; more of them were balls in the dirt that John Buck, bless his poor form behind the plate, failed to control.
As for JPA, hopefully he can shake this off. Strike out wild pitch that loses the game?!?! ouch. Adam Lind is next.
He will. Again, that's baseball; every player in your lineup will make a big mistake (if not one that possibly costs a game) every week or less. The upshot is that he'll probably spend a bit more time learning to smother those pitches, and that's a good thing.