Post#268 » by Schad » Fri May 16, 2014 11:28 pm
Even setting aside the silliness of bunting in general, bunting with this lineup is even more pointless. Yeah, there are times when Scrub Second Baseman of the Week should bunt, and they do. Most of the rest of them, however, do not have the bat control to bunt. For the 1000th time: bunting a ball down the line, particularly snap bunts where you're trying to catch the defense unawares, is not the easiest skill. Here are the regular starters in our lineup, including the number of sac bunts and bunt hits they have in their careers:
Dioner Navarro - 29 sac bunts, 11 bunt singles.
Edwin Encarnacion - 31 sac bunts, 0 bunt singles.
Jose Reyes - 33 sac bunts, 72 bunt singles.
Brett Lawrie - 5 sac bunts, 1 bunt single.
Melky Cabrera - 38 sac bunts, 25 bunt singles.
Colby Rasmus - 11 sac bunts, 19 bunt singles.
Jose Bautista - 22 sac bunts, 3 bunt singles.
Adam Lind - 3 sac bunts, 0 bunt singles.
Juan Francisco - 0 sac bunts, 1 bunt single.
So, with the exception of Jose Reyes and early-career Melky, these are players with an extremely sparse record of bunt attempts...we're talking a couple per year. And lo, we'll probably be talking a couple this year, as well. You really want a bunt of players who almost never bunt and in many cases have not regularly bunted in their bleedin' lives to start utilizing it frequently because you think they'd score more runs that way than the 4.9 per game they're pulling off now?

**** your asterisk.