“In arranging your order of striking, see that strong hitters follow the poor batsmen, and that good baserunners precede them.”
Henry Chadwick in the 1867 edition of “Haney’s Base Ball Book of Reference”
In baseball, some thinking only has so many directions it can go in, so it almost universally stays true to its origins.
When it comes to making out a baseball lineup, the thinking behind arranging nine men into a batting order has generally never strayed too far from Chadwick’s timeless advice that is now 146 years old.
Jays manager John Gibbons echoes those thoughts himself as he ponders, in spring training, about putting together as awesome a starting nine as the franchise has had since its World Series years.
When he pens his lineup card, Gibbons will feature the “good base runners” up front in Jose Reyes at lead off and Melky Cabrera in the two hole. They will be followed by the power hitting of Jose Bautista and Edwin Encarnacion. That’s the plan and the blueprint, and it’s not likely to change, barring injury and days off.
“Reyes, that’s his job to make things happen and he does that really well,” Gibbons said. “Reyes is one of the elite leadoff guys. Having a switch hitter in the No. 2 is something some guys like . . . and some guys like players who can bunt there. But I think you need one of your best batters there, a guy who can really handle the bat against any pitching.”
“A guy who can hit with strikes on the count and if you make a mistake (the pitcher) he can run one out of the park. If there’s too much focus on Reyes, Melky can do a job and then we get to the run producers (Bautista and Encarnacion). Jose is the fear factor you need. “
As easy and ready as those top four Jays hitters appear to be in the thinking behind a batting order, there is an art to situating all nine players. Managers for decades have pondered what may work best against a certain pitcher; what talent he has at his disposal; what is the depth of his bench player corps; what speed he has at his disposal; how to arrange things so that his best hitters actually see strikes instead of off speed stuff and attempts to pitch around their power. The intangibles are endless, and the end result of a lineup is to strike balance.
Gibbons knows that, and so do some of the other managers in the Jays organization.
Balance may be the key to the art.
http://www.thestar.com/sports/bluejays/ ... ineup.html