0:00 The Mets don't try
00:22:41 The A's keep making errors
00:26:09 Ronel Blanco no-hitter
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Hello, and welcome to Jimmy's Three Things. I got three things I want to talk about in the baseball world today. One is McNeil, the Mets sliding, breaking up double plays, not breaking up double plays. I did about as big of a deep dive as I've done in a while, because I just kept going down a rabbit hole and getting kind of very curious into what I was finding. Two Oakland's committing errors at an all time pace, and three we had a no hitter in Houston. I might just poke around those two things and watch some video and see Thank you very much for tuning in if you enjoy this show or talking baseball in general. The series recaps the midweek episode Subscribe to the channel. I'm gonna take a sip in my coffee, and then we're gonna dive in to topic number one. Topic number one McNeil and Reyess Hoskins the fight. I did a breakdown on it. I was very interested in it. In my breakdown, this part kind of really made me think, like, wait, what because they watched the replay and then McNeil turns after watching the replay and he says, you think that's fucking okay? And you can see rees is like, yeah, so there's just a disconnect between what's a good slide, what's a bad slide, what's allowed, what's not allowed, what's dirty, what's not dirty, what's aggressive and competitive, and what's dirty. And McNeil seems to think that anything aggressive and competitive is dirty because a lot of MLB players that I reached out to Trevor Pluff who does talking baseball, and then he reached out to other guys like that's not dirty, it's aggressive. It was late, but he's trying to break up the double play within the rules of the game and didn't get anyone injured. Dallas Braden tweed it out, like, dude, learn to move your feet around the bag. You just planted there. So the first thing in the rabbit hole, I'm just gonna give you the rabbit hole that I went down in chronological order number one. This picture was flying around the internet from Braves fans saying like, well, McNeil's done a dirty slide too. Look at this slide. He's way offline, out of the base path. So I said, all right, let's go find that play. I want to I want to see if that you know, if this is just a screenshot or is that really a dirty play? So I pulled up play and here it is the local back hits hit to second, McNeil slides and they run in each other. It's not dirty. He's really just sliding way early, like if you want to say the cut off of the grass. I don't know if my curse on screen, the cutoff of the grass right there, that's kind of like early or late, just just an easy way to gauge. If you slide after that, it's a little late aggressive. If you slide before that, you're giving yourself up. Because he's not really trying to get to the bag there. I think he didn't realize the shortstop was gonna come into him. So I didn't think that was dirty. It ended up helping, but I didn't think that was dirty on McNeil's part, to his credit. Now where things got weird as I went and I was like, well, let's see if McNeil has any dirty slides. So I went and I searched every time McNeil's been on first base. And there's less than two outs, so the team is going to try and turn a double play, and there's a ground ball to the infield and I wanted to see what that looks like, and what I found kind of blew me away. And I'll just show you all the videos that I found now and what you're looking for as this plays is McNeil's the runner on first and how he tries to break up double place.
There is a six four three Taylor garda short. Velasquez makes another good play, starts an inning popper out to Vidamos to allow one first right Padia. I'll twove with the easy turn for the six full ball right Bertie, the turn by Diaz for Bross, the flip to Castrolly off balance, will play ball right at Iglesias, the turn by Alberto for the sixth side. Kim will go to second for one on the first hint, we'll play ball right to Crawford the turn.
So as you can see, he he doesn't try to break up the double play. It's almost like it's not an option in his head. I watched one hundred and sixty instances in his career and I had to cut a lot down because this this got too long. Uh. A lot of them look like this.
The play ball right at bullguards and on the turn by Gonzalez to turn it. There's one stuck with Platt. That's why he did it. You sawing him move into the spot and it's starter to the command.
I mean, he's not even he's being considerate, he's being gentlemanly. He's saying, Hey, I don't want to get in the way of what you guys are doing. You want to turn the dope play, go ahead and turn it? Who am I to try to stop it?
The second and Briard Donaldson on the back end out at second and here's the grounder come and go to second for one on for Harrison Garcia down the third, Walls goes to second for one lowed Edic to Crawford two. A'll beast roco beat.
What was the hat? You know what was that one? If I go backwards here when I was fought, when I was finding these, there were something like that where he just runs straight through, doesn't slide at all. He never really tries to slide and get to the bag. He's not really trying to get in the way. So that was really weird to me and kind of eye opening, like, oh, he's very respectful, so he thinks that you shouldn't try to break up double plays. And then I was like, Okay, let's go watch what Reee Hoskins does. Who's slower than McNeil. And McNeil has this like reputation it's like a blue collar grinder, like tough player. So that kind of really surprised me to see all of that. I went to Reee Hoskins, who's slower I think twenty percent. I think Hoskins is like I think McNeil's fifty percent in sprint speed and Hoskins is like twenty five. So here's every time Reee Hoskins has been on first base and there's a grounder to the infield less than two out, so the team's going to try and turn a double play. And here's how he attacks it.
That's trying to turn two I left side Conaworth will go to second base for one. On the first it will be off the marshwart stop the young has it, goes to second for one, back over the first nine and something and done the second for one. I mean, they won't turn the double.
So as you can see, what Hoskins does is he gets his ass down the line quick. When he gets to that cutoff point that I was talking about, he gets big like a bear, like you're trying to scare a bear. Ah, you know, throws his hands up, gets kind of upright with his chest, and then drops down into the base. And as you can see on these highlights, he induces a lot of bad throws and breaks up the double play. He's never injured someone at second. That's a good example of what he does. He's never injured the player. You know, there might be contact, but within the rules, and he's it's winning baseball. I mean, he's doing everything he can. He's like, hey, I don't have speed, so I'm not gonna be safe here. Let me try and do everything I can to play winning baseball. And that's what he's doing. And this was again to cut this down. I just there's just a lot of examples of this where he's inducing bad throws, putting pressure on the fielder and it's working. McNeil was the complete opposite. He was granting people double plays. I was very confused.
I was like, this is odd.
So I oh this. I have so many more of these from McNeil. See I color coded it. Pink was to the shortstop, yellow was to the third baseman, and blue was to the second baseman. And yeah, so Reese breaks up a lot of double plays by using his big body and getting to the bag down late. Again, he never hurt anyone. It's just that it's still part of the game. The rules didn't make this not part of the game. But I'm beginning to think the Mets might think the rules made this not part of the game because I kept digging right well. First I wanted to compare Rees and McNeil. Again, McNeil is faster. Here's the ball hit to the shortstop and fl to second base, very similar play. Reese is already in frame and he's sliding. He's not going down until he hits that cut off point of the grass where McNeil is giving himself up way early has no interest in being part of the play and just says, there you go, go ahead, turn it. So that was wild. And then I was said, Okay, let me find one in a close game, because that's unfair if one game doesn't matter and the other game is really close. So up top you have Phillies. They are tied at zero in the bottom of the fourth inning, base is loaded down below. The Mets are up two in the sixth inning, and I also wanted to find balls that were hit similar. So if you see on my premiere timeline this blue marker, that's when the ball hits the bat. So the ball hits the bat, I sink to that up and then the ball is hit to the shortstop and as they flip it to the second basement, you can see Reee Hoskins is in frame and he's about to get big on him like a bear, and then drop down to make it hard. And McNeil just comes into frame now and has no interest in playing competitive baseball on this play, just gives himself up and makes it easy. And I was like, that's crazy, and then I wanted and then I wanted to make sure people didn't think I was cherry picking a bajillion, So I put two Reese Hoskins on the right and eight McNeil on the left. And again this point where the blue marker is on my timeline is when the bat hits the ball. And if you watch through to when Reese gets to the bag, he's by the cut on the two on the right already and McNeil is nowhere in frame on the bottom floor and on the top four he's like going down ready and not really trying to break it up, so that blew me away. Man, It's like, what's going on here? Is this just a McNeil thing? Is this a Mets thing? And then I was I was is this around the league thing? Like?
What is this?
I again? I send videos to some players that I know and talked to, and they were like, what that is crazy?
What is going on?
They're like, Reese looks normal, That's like what you're supposed to do. So then I had to dig deeper because I was watching the Mets game last night and Lindor on a double playball ran through the bag and then the announcers kind of talked about the strategy to that, but to be honest, I forget and I couldn't figure out what they the strategy was. So I'm gonna have to go find that footage right now because I couldn't prep it. Let's go see if I can find it. Okay, I found that it was a double play to end the first inning, Lindor just runs through the bag and they explain why here again, this is me hearing it for like the first time, because I don't remember what they said.
Play that ended at the bottom of the first inning, I'll be biased with the glove flip, and you see that Lindor does not slide there. This is something that is relatively new in the game where players are being instructed to do this. Yes, and the idea is that if they don't get the out there, they have to go tag and they running from third's gonna score. And also another thing.
Too, Okay, if they don't get the out, if they don't get the out, if they don't get the out, they have to go tag him and the runner on third will score. So if the if the if they don't get the out at second, so if the fielder, what if the fielder botches the the like misses the bag with his foot, that's what they're preparing for. There's the runners on first and second.
So.
They're saying, don't try to slide and make this what they okay, standard strategy would be like, hey it, try to do a late slide and make this dude uncomfortable turning this double play within the rules and without injuring him. And if he throws the ball away the runner that was started on second, that's that third rounding third right now, we'll score on a bad throw, right, So force a bad throw, or make him so uncomfortable he doesn't want to throw it away and he eats the play and doesn't turn to They're saying their Mets are instructing them to casually jog through the base in case this dude's foot isn't on the bag, So then he would turn around and go tag Lindor and while he's doing that, the runner on third will score. That's crazy, weird. I think them Mets think you can't break up double place. So I watched this last night. I was like, wait, what, what are you doing? What's happening? So then I went back into the deep dives and I found all the other Mets players last year that kind of have speed and should be hustling and breaking up double plays, and I searched for instances when they would be tasked to like make the dude uncomfortable throw it. So, uh, here's what I found.
Try to second for one Honda. First fins went thro the middle and great timing stopped by Abrams to turn by Garst to middle right to Rojas, Juggles takes it.
They all do it to the bat.
Second, Actually, the third Sosa.
What is that? There's not a runner on second. That could be rounding third in this one, So like that strategy doesn't even make sense, even though it doesn't make sense already. This is a tide game in the third inning, and instead of trying to make break up the double.
Play, actually the third Sosa play ball right, go along with the turn that it should be two ball the second for one over the first tide him up here you go hold down the third and heyes goes cross bydy to second, the left side, chance for two. The turn by Andrew bravera high hop to second could tell for one. All right here Perdomo Marte softly hit, but vogel Bach doesn't run well, and it's a double play ball right the Seager, the turn by Semi and double play ball right at Arcia, the turn by alb rolical third ground on a hop. Domas nice to play fill the second pecond three two. Marte not running well and it's gonna be third. Chance for two, barks to second at Garca sharply one hop by Anderson. He gets the out of second.
At where was he? Where are they? What is going on? My only saving grace was and Mets fans, if you're still watching, I'm so sorry. I was running this by Mets fans in the office, being like, guys, what's going on. They said they never noticed this. Alonso and uh Canna last year they acted normal.
Rounded slowly the third and ran with the sidearm tossing.
That is the same as the ree Hoskins slide. You know, good job by Pete. He's at the cut of the grass. He's getting down laid, he's throwing his arms up, He's trying to make them uncomfortable. Here's Alonzo again. Look at this nice. So some guys, I guess aren't listening to whoever's telling them to not do this. Uh. Here's Kana and yeah, he's he's playing hard. He doesn't not want them to turn this. Look at that slide, you know, and he and he gets the player. Here Oswaldo and that's legal, that's fair. As Walda's gotta move his feet. You gotta come through the bag. You can't just stand on the bag.
Uh.
So you know, Alonzo and Kana great stuff. And then I thought, Okay, before I make this video, I gotta check around the league. I gotta make sure this isn't widespread. And just because like they don't do it. I've never noticed it or you know, even Mets fans that I talked to, they didn't even notice it. So I checked around the league, and I'm gonna give you guys the link to check. But yes, not every team is doing this. Sure, there's slow guys that they don't get down the line, they're not going to there's kind of guys that might be injured or hurting, and you know, or the games lopsided. But in most cases, when it's a close game and you have a double play ball, guys are trying to break up the double play. They're trying to slide late, make that field, are uncomfortable within the rules of the law, and break up the double play. So that at least saved my soul a little bit. But I don't know what's going on in Queens. It seems like they're instructed. I think maybe they have the rule wrong. So I will post a link to this search that I did for you guys, so you can go check it out. And what I did was, here's all the parameters. So I did twenty twenty three season. Okay, balls hit to the shortstop and third baseman. All right, there's zero outs, are one out, so you need to runners not on second, not on third, runner on first, so you're gonna turn two batted ball type ground ball, and then just to because you get like two hundred options to find better ones or you know, to even like limit it a little more. I did batting score difference three runs, so it's a three run game. And then I did the exit velo on the ball eighty miles per hour to ninety five miles pro because if it's over ninety five, they're gonna turn that so fast that the runner doesn't really have time to get down there. But anywhere between eighty and ninety five, that's a double play ball where the runner has time with a lead to go makes up and happen and break it up, and then you can all you gotta do is change the team so you can check out how your team does this. The only warning I'll give is Mariners. You guys were very similar to the Mets, but I think it's mostly uh Henyo Suarez from last year. But like man, go to the Angels who last year were you know, well they were in it for a while and then in the last two months they weren't. Uh, they like they had seventeen instances because we really dwindled it down. And if you just watch a bunch of theirs, I'll pop them all out and we'll just watch so you guys can see, Like, if you want to do this at home, this just how you do it. Just hold option or command, open new tab and then you know, just skip ahead to the ball and got down, threw the hands up, tried to break it up. Yep, hands up at the cut trying to get down. Very normal, look it for here we go up. That was an error. Those will pop up. You see those every now and then. Okay, here we go right there, hands up, sliding late, trying to break it up. So, angels fans, if you're tuned in, you know, you got other problems you care about, but this isn't one. So this is what I did all last night. I just checked every team to figure out. I just didn't want to make a video about the Mets and have it be widespread around the league. You know, but if you do this same search and you find the Mets's it hurts my baseball soul, you know, size lead Look at this, what are we doing? What is going? Ah? Okay, that one got botched.
Why are we doing this?
Is nimo.
He's fast.
So yeah, you can go to this search and I'll put the link in the YouTube and what are we doing? And you can see if your team what the organization does. Do they tell people to break up the double play? Or do they tell people to run away and not try to make anyone uncomfortable and just give up and say, oh, you guys want to turn two? Who am I to get? In a way? Very bizarre behavior. I don't really get it, and like I said, it kind of hurts my soul a little bit to watch because just because you can't slide past the bag, all you have to do is slide in the vicinity of the bag, maintain contact with the bag, and you're fine. Liked Reese's slide was a legal slide. The reason it looks dirty, and I'll go back to the premiere video of it. The reason it looks dirty is because McNeil bobbles this ball. Also, McNeil just stands on top of the bag because I think he thinks you can't do this, but you can. You're supposed to like run through it. All the times you see the second Mason run through the bad catch it and move their body forward with momentum. Now this throw wasn't great, and then he drops the transfer. So instead of watching out for the runner, he's like, you know, worried about the ball maybe, but he's just planted normally. He throws that and that back leg comes up, and that's what happens when Reese goes down. Instead, the back leg stays down because he didn't throw it. You know, think about a throwing motion, that leg would swing forward and he'd be on the other side of the bag. Reese doesn't know he's going to bobble the ball. He bobbles the ball. A lot of people said that Reese cleaded him, and I was like, what do you mean, Like he spikes weren't that up? They're like the same level as the foot spikes up like get him in the shin. And some of the videos I showed earlier, they did have spikes up and then it is awkward that he lands on the other foot. But again, at the time Reese goes down, he doesn't know Baity's going to bobble this ball and stay planted with both legs. He thinks he's going to throw the ball and end up on over here. You know, so it ends up it's bad and it doesn't look good, but it's it's mostly incidental and it's a still a legal slide. I just think the Mets have been told that those slides are illegal, and that's why we had this confusion. You think that's fucking okay, you're allowed to slide? What's wrong with that? Alright? That was Jimmy's first thing, And to be honest, I like these videos to be around twenty minutes, and that was a deep dive into a first thing. So I'm gonna speed up the next two things. Oakland's committing errors like absolutely crazy and Blanco through a no hitter. I don't know if I'm gonna be able to get into all of these that much, so let's just speed through it. I'm gonna maybe I'll dice up and search around. I'm gonna find some interesting stuff. Topic number two, Oakland A's are committing errors at an all time pace, and it's it's sad. I haven't seen all the errors from last night's game, so I'm gonna go watch them. But if you look, this was their first game they lost to the Guardians. They committed one air okay, one air it's fine, no problem. Their very next game they committed two errors. Shit. Uh. Their third game two errors as well. No, there their fourth game three errors. Oh and their fifth game five errors. Uh oh asterix. I had roticism as a kid growing up, and I couldn't pronounce my rs and I had to go to speech therapy. So if I say errors weird at any point in this video, you can make fun of me. But just no, you're rude.
Uh.
I was a whale road kid, and to all my uh roticism kids out there, just strengthen that tongue. Work hard at it. You know it can be fixed. I talk all day now. Top of the first one runner on no outs, swing and a miss throw down a second? My dude, is that? My dude? Langlears? My good? Is it actually is that him? Yeah? I just did a video on this guy. His pop time is incredible, his arm strength is incredible. Look at him pick this ball, scoops it and then probably makes a good throw. Wow, that's a little far, but they're just not giving. If he doesn't make a perfect throw to his glove, they just let it go to the outfield. He had two others same thing. God damn kind of looks like me there. Huh. People have said this before. Were right here? Hah, I see it all right? Next there, so its a no okay, this one's put in play. Same situation, run around first no outs?
What?
Oh shit? Okay?
Fuck?
Same inning? Still no outs. Next batter two O pitch, don't tell me? All right? Thank god you caught it in the right field. They're trying to throw it at home. Oh my goodness, these are errors. You don't see off the shin pad. Is anyone backing him up?
Man?
All right? Top? Third? Two on again? No outs? Again?
Oh?
Nice pick? And what what the hell? All right? Nice pick at first? Base doesn't go to second, I think because he can't get it out of his glove cleanly, even though by the time he does get out of his glove he's still can Someone might have been yelling pivots to first and the picture's not looking, so he's got no target. And then the picture when the picture, when the picture's running, when the picture stops to turn and look at him, he slows his feet down, so then the target's offline. Oh man, this is ugly. Okay, we're in the third now two outs, pick off? Oh you can't be doing that. I mean, we can't be making extra throws if we're the a's that's not allowed. That's a bad recipe. Shit, man, that's ugly. I don't like that. I don't like that at all. That's ugly. Topic number three. Astros got their first win and it was a no hitter by Ronel Blanco. Ronelle Ronald Blanco, tell me how to say his name in the chat I in the comments. I like looking at no hitters and complete games in this way. There might be easier ways to streamline getting this info, but this is kind of just how I've done it because I've made breakdowns on no hitters and I wanted to collect video, collect data while being able to get the video. So I have nine tabs open for each inning. And so in the first inning, he threw nineteen pitches and I'm just gonna flip through. In the second inning he threw thirteen. That's a decent amount, Okay. So in the third inning he threw six, so that's the bottom of the order got through well, fourth twelve eleven nine again, so he breathed through the bottom twice. It looks like then a top eleven ten and at the end fourteen, So then I like going, you can see the pitch breakdown here, or actually, this isn't gonna be the right thing. I want to see pitch tight breakdown. So in the first inning it was mostly four seam fastball and sliders, three change ups, so he threw three pitches right away. Sometimes people save those. In the second inning, he went with change up. Okay, so much bigger mix, mostly change up, but it didn't throw the four seam a lot. In the second inning. I wonder if there was more lefties up or righty's. I'll have to check that out. And then to the bottom of the order. The first time threw let's see what he did here? Did he throw a mix? Oh? Okay, he introduced the curveball? One curveball. A lot of times people will use the bottom of the order to throw a pitch that they that they didn't throw the first time through so they can get a feel for it before the top comes up. So then let's see the first inning. Who gave him trouble?
It went?
If I just this will give me like pitch by pitch data a little bit and I can look at the result of the pitch. So we go ball ball swing strike ball ball. Oh, so he opened up with the walk. I haven't looked at this at all. I was watching the Yankees and then fell asleep. Open up with a walk. What was his ninings pitch zero hits, zero runs, two walks. So the first batter of the game was a walk. Hey, maybe that helped him out. You know, pressure of a perfect game gone. If you get behind, you can walk. Guy didn't do it a lot. Then Vladdie struck out and he went fastball, fastball. Where all the balls here, fastball, ball, slider ball, both fastball, called strike, fastball, blocked ball. Then he went change up to Vladdie, okay, change up, change up, and then he went change up to end the inning against Darshow. Let's see that one two years ago in April. So change up to the righty in just wasn't expecting it, I guess, he said, Darshow Varshow, Dalton Varshow just was not expecting that at all. So the second time through he throws the change up more. I guess he's like, hey, that worked. I ended the inning with a change up right now, was probably like, if that's who's catching, like, let's just do that again. So then he gets Alejandro on two pitches and he got the change up. Was the pitch man. This is something Hobby Or did to the Yankees. They didn't know he really had a change up Anymore's an awkward swing round out. Okay, uh. Then Ernie Clement comes up. Oh, just got dark in this room. Automatic light turn off called strike ball ball hit into play on the change up again. So that was at least the first time through the first two batters. The three batters didn't really face it, and then they were just got a good thing going with this change up. Cool all right. And then let's see kre Meyer two oh to kre Meyer and he throws the change up two to oh. Meyer is gonna crush a two oh fast ball. He's gonna try to crush one. And he goes, oh, what a pitch two to oh is a fastball count because you don't want to go down three to oh. So he's throwing a change up here, which he's not throwing for a strike. It falls off, so it's going to be ball three. But they are banking on kier Meyer swinging, so their reports say, hey, this guy's gonna swing two oh, which he did. That's that's a nice that's fun. Then they went back to back change ups on kier Meyer here. So the two O was a change up that he swung over, and they went back to it and he got him again. That is fun. They went three times in a row, all right. They went three change ups in a row to keer Myyer in this that bat that one that was in the zone and he fouled it off a little too high. Then they went back to the fastball and then hit him with a slider when the count was full. Is ballsy pitching? And that's dead center slider kind of just I don't even that's not really a good pitch. I just think it's again somewhat of a fastball count, not really anymore these days. And ker Myer's looking at fastball. That's cool. Alright. Third inning bttom of the orders up for the JS and he gets he goes through him with six pitches. What's this? Okay? IKF he just goes slider slider. It makes sense. I think is just gonna see a ton of sliders because his back foot just like totally goes crazy. Look at his back foot leaves the ground like way before impact. It just sliding put a charge in that one. Kevin Bigio cald strike called strike, swinging strike. Nice pitch, Visio just taking the whole way off of that fastball. He goes with the change up. So Vidio just took that as well. Oh, two in a hole. Wasn't really ready for either of those. And then damn change up is nasty, all right, So he breathed through that. Oh George Springer first, Oh, he went, So this is to get me over curve, maybe because it's the first it's the first batter of this inning. Second time through, and he pops it up. Was not expecting a curveball, went fourth pitch. Well, this is kind of fun. I'm having fun with his exercise. Sorry, if this is boring you, I guess you just turn off the video and bow out. But I've kind of just been talking out loud. This is like what my brain. This is what I do when people throw a hitters. I just go through like this. Um all right. So then he uses the change up again to get Vladdie, because I believe he didn't use that first time through. He didn't use it till later on. No, he threw one to Vlatti the first time through. Damn, he's thrown it for a strike. Man, he's thrown it for a looking strike because I think they just don't know it exists. Goes, get me over curveball to Turner. So this was a plan. Let's show him the curveball the second time through. They're not gonna know what's coming. Let's just sneak strike one by him. If they swinging it, it's gonna be off balance because they're not gonna sit first pitch curveball because you didn't throw it all the first time through. It's your fourth pitch. Cool pitching eventually gets Turner on the change up. So the change up was the pitch. The change up was the nasty pitch. Bar show comes up and he just gets a smattering of changeups.
Again.
Man, a lot of these at bats ended with change ups. Going to the fifth inning. Now eleven pitches in the fifth inning, Alejandro Kirk slider, slider, slider, So now it's slider heavy Kirk Ernie Clement. He goes another first pitch curveball. Didn't work this time, Let's see, so he's just using this curveballs and get me over. Curve that wasn't really get me over. He kind of wanted him to chase there. Then he's throw the slider after that strike on the fastball, Oh, with two strikes, went to the change up, didn't get the k on Clement one two pitch change up in the zone. He'd been freezing a lot of people with that. From what I watched, that was fouled off. So off of that, they go, Okay, you're gonna foul off the change up. You know what exists, now you're ready for it. How about this slider popped up? Awkward? Swing's so upset with himself play and then kier Myer comes up another first pitch curveball. How many first pitch curveballs did he throw? Did he throw a curveball on any other count? Look at that? Ker Myer's just like, you fucker, dude, how come they're not telling each other? Hey, second time through, he's going first pitch curve Eventually someone's gotta jump that. He said face by ker Myers, like you fucker didn't know that was coming. Uh, and then change up to get him out. Damn man, good pitching, fun but the Blue Jays you gotta pick up on this stuff. Okay, So then he gave ikf all sliders his first time through, slider, slider, all fastballs this time out, and then a slider to finish him off before he hits it into play. Okay, fastball fest Oh wow, look at this Bigio. All change ups three in a row. He threw four change ups in a row here. I wonder if they got He just really liked it. Pitch one to Bigio, change up, inside swing and miss. Pitch two. Oh, that is exactly where he wants. That pitch didn't get the call. It was a little low right down the middle with the change up. Jesus just begging them to hit it. He's like, do you guys know about my change up yet, because if you sit on it, probably hit it. Oh my goodness, first pitch right down the middle man, And I think he was. I think, to Springer's credit, I think he was kind of sitting on that, just was on top of it because it's got some slight dip. Kind of nuts. Man. What inning did I just do?
The sixth.
Yeah, seventh inning, latties up again, slider, change up, slider. No fastballs this inning, two fastballs in the whole inning. Wow. Turner gave him a first pitch out all change ups, all sliders. Eighth inning, only three fastballs, all change ups. The change up was just absolutely like working. And in the ninth inning only two fastballs.
Damn.
So like the last at bat, Flatty comes up and they got to know the scouting report and the numbers, like, hey, he's he's really liking that change up. He only threw two fastballs the last couple innings. So he shows him fastball right away up top. You build off that, so now it's one to oher and now you go change up in the zone. Low. That's a really nice pitch. Okay, now it's one to one, and he's gonna just go double up that change up, trying to get him a swing and mist they're good for Vlady doesn'tvite. Also, pressure of a no hitter on the line right here? What was that slider that was just like kind of a nothing slider. I think that didn't do much hovering there, but it's at a good spot up and In is trying to do more with that and then a change up. The only thing I want to do, I want to look up one thing before I get out of here. I want to look up. I'm gonna cancel out the inning, and then I'm gonna look up pitch type and I'm gonna put in curveball, and then I'm gonna search how many curveballs he threw in this game, and then I'm going to four and then I'm gonna go pitch count. And it was all second time through the order, so I think he had a very very good plan there. Second time through, we're gonna go first pitch curveballs because we didn't show him the curve it all the first time through, so they're not it's not in their head. That's cool. It's good pitching. Thank you guys very much for watching. I recorded this and it took a long time. Hopefully I was able to chop it down enough. Appreciate you. Subscribe to the channel if you enjoy these, and we will be back every Tuesday for Jimmy's Three Things, where it'll be an article, a hot story, a news story, a question, and the stat deep dive like this and enjoy yourselves and everyone around you, and call your moms and tell them how and go Yanks. Nah, I know, not for all of you. By