Pat Venditte: The Switch Pitcher

Discussion in 'Baseball Forum' started by dwalsh, Jun 20, 2008.

  1. dwalsh

    dwalsh 2006 TGG.com Rookie of the Year Award Winner

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  2. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    That's awesome. I would imagine there will be some sort of rule change very soon.
     
  3. statjeff22

    statjeff22 2008 Green Guy "Most Knowledgeable" Award Winner

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    Can someone explain to me why Venditte was getting pissed off? He was the one who was causing the entire problem and was trying to get an advantage on the hitter - why shouldn't the hitter get to respond to those tactics?

    It occurring at the Staten Island - Brooklyn game makes sense, since IMO Venditte's actions were bush league in every sense.
     
  4. MSUJet85

    MSUJet85 ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ
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    Well to be fair, you don't see switch pitchers very often actually this is the 1st time I've ever seen anything like this
     
  5. statjeff22

    statjeff22 2008 Green Guy "Most Knowledgeable" Award Winner

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    I understand that - I don't blame the umpires - but what does Venditte have to complain about?
     
  6. MSUJet85

    MSUJet85 ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ
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    I think it was confusing and frustrating to everyone, that is the reason why they both are switch so they can have an advantage. Honestly if I was in either person's position I would do the exact same thing.
     
  7. vinsjets

    vinsjets Active Member

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    Agreed MSU...
    I thought the batter could only switch sides after a pitch is thrown? No idea for a pitcher, but that is pretty amazing.
     
  8. Dierking

    Dierking Well-Known Member

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    If that went down in Liberty, MO someone woulda got shanked.
     
  9. TampaBayJetsFan85

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    I guess if you have a pitcher who is great from both sides, as a righty and a lefty... I guess you could say he could pitch about 200 times, 100 with his right and another 100 with his left arm. Complete games everytime out.

    Just think of a pitcher that can dominate as a lefty like Kazmir then in the 7th inning switch to throwing as a righty and dominate like Pedro

    But I really doubt that we would ever see a pitcher who could be great from BOTH sides of the mound, I just cant see it
     
  10. 3rdAnd15Draw

    3rdAnd15Draw Well-Known Member

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    They should just treat it like a new pitcher, once he switches he has to face a batter before he's allowed to switch again.
     
  11. statjeff22

    statjeff22 2008 Green Guy "Most Knowledgeable" Award Winner

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    I suspect that that is exactly what will happen. That gives the choice to the batter as to how he chooses to bat, which is of course the way it is now.
     
  12. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    Completely disagree. The batter should have to choose first, just like the batter is announced before a pitching change is made. Because there are rules governing where you bat depending on handedness but none relating to the hand you pitch with, he should have to declare first.
     
  13. MobiusOne28

    MobiusOne28 New Member

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    The modern Era rule has been established already because of Greg Harris:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greg_A._Harris

    The pitcher needs to choose a side and then stick with it through the AB. The umps botched the call.

    Still hilarious though.
     
  14. statjeff22

    statjeff22 2008 Green Guy "Most Knowledgeable" Award Winner

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    Well, according to Mobius it's already been decided along the lines 3rd and I said, but I don't know why you think that a batter has to be announced before a pitching change is made - that's what managers who are making pitching changes often do, but there's no rule that says they have to. They do it precisely because the rules are more restrictive for pitchers than for batters - once a pitcher is put in a game, he has to face a batter, but a pinch hitter can be pinch hit for without any restriction. Further, a batter is definitely allowed to switch sides between pitches, so what you're proposing is taking away something from the batters that they already have. Saying that the pitcher has to decide how he's going to pitch before the batter steps in is the natural analogue to saying that switching arms is like being a new pitcher, just as 3rd said.
     
  15. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    But it's NOT a new pitcher. It's just a different delivery. No different than dropping down to the side once in a while. Also, it's not a written rule what he posted. It was what the AL president at the time told the umps, but as far as I know it was never made official. It IS an official rule however that the batter can't change while the pitcher is on the rubber, or he's out. So all the pitcher has to do is stand behind the rubber, wait for the batter to choose, and put his glove on as he steps on the rubber, locking the batter in for that pitch. I never said the batter couldn't change between pitches, but the pitcher could then change too.
     
  16. NDmick

    NDmick Revis Christ

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    This kid is the 1st ambidextrous pitcher ever, so there is no rule for switching hands. The new rule will probably be that he has to pick a hand for a batter, and stay with that hand. Once the at bat is completed, he can switch if he'd like.

    A batter can switch all he likes, no matter the count. Thats the rule. This will be discussed at length by officials so there are no more incidents. They should call it the "Venditte Rule" since he's the only one of his kind.
     
  17. Penning10toColes

    Penning10toColes Active Member

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    That was hilarious. Any info on just how good the pitcher is? Any chance his coaches have him focus on one side (seems like something coaches might do...I hope not though)?
     
  18. statjeff22

    statjeff22 2008 Green Guy "Most Knowledgeable" Award Winner

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    And then you end up with the nonsense that happened in the game. That is exactly what can't happen - you need a stopping rule, and they're not going to take away something batters have always had for one guy.
     
  19. JetBlue

    JetBlue Well-Known Member

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    the ump doesn't have to allow time to the batter, so once a batter is in the box, he no longer has control of whether he can change sides or not and has committed to that side, regardless of what the pitcher does.

    so, if the pitcher changes sides, the batter is SOL, he has already committed. I fail to see what the confusion was in this instance. all the ump had to do was not allow the time to the batter to change sides and there would be no problem. if the batter steps out, too bad, let the pitcher throw the pitch. the only thing the pitcher has to avoid is a balk as he changes hands, that is his only responsibility. but the pitcher/batter interface is instigated by the batter digging in, so he naturally has to choose first. pitchers don't stare in until the batter is in the box.

    this wasn't a rule problem, it was an ump problem who got confused and didn't realize he was actually in charge of the game and the batter.
     
    #19 JetBlue, Jun 20, 2008
    Last edited: Jun 20, 2008
  20. devilonthetownhallroof

    devilonthetownhallroof 2007 TGG Fantasy Baseball League Champion

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    It IS an official rule however that the batter can't change while the pitcher is on the rubber, or he's out. So all the pitcher has to do is stand behind the rubber, wait for the batter to choose, and put his glove on as he steps on the rubber, locking the batter in for that pitch.
     

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