Talk:1968 in baseball

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I caught the end of the 1967 season and instantly become a fan of baseball. Due to injuries to the world champion Orioles of 1966 there was a terrific power vacuum in the American league. Minnesota, Boston, Detroit, Chicago and even for a while the California Angels turned the season into a terrific race. 1968 was the first complete season that I followed. Yaz barely made .301 after winning the Triple Crown in 1967. Pitcher dominance was incredible but it also became pretty clear that it wasn't the same game. Baseball was losing its battle with football. Baseball lost its balance. It was becoming a defensive game. Nothing brought this point home like the year of the pitcher in 1968. While the article mentions many factors for the year of the pitcher it overlooks some other issues e.g. over-expansion, the 'automatic out', and what can only be described as the numerous pitcher parks in use. It may have been unintentional but too many well hit balls simply died 'out there'. Real estate developers with an eye towards value built facilities for baseball and football clubs to share. They promised greater seating capacity at a time when the gate counted more than the television contract. Architects were also inclined to build something pleasing to the eye but wrong for baseball. Smaller ball parks are recently returning and the stadiums departing. Over-expansion and its side-effects remains a problem. The clubs to their credit are searching for talent around the world these days but in 1968 it was still an 'American' game and there weren't enough 'Americans' left to cover the positions. Too little scouting was done outside the country. Football, basketball and ice hockey were draining atheletes from baseball. In 1968 it simply wasn't the national game anymore. There simply wasn't enough talent for the lineups of the clubs or the bench. Even then the pitchers were considered automatic outs. They were seldom used as pinch hitters. They just couldn't hit. Starters only stayed in the game while hey were ahead. Their appearance at the plate was more a matter of reluctance to pinch hit for them so early in the game than choice. It was a eight-man line-up and lead to the desiginated hitter in the American league. Another side-effect of expansion was the increasing lack of depth even on the rosters of the 'good' clubs. Injuries to star players damaged the clubs' fortunes for the season. They declined to the AAA level which left them accessible to an opponent with good pitching. The injury bug devasted the 1966 Orioles who never really recovered their domination until 1969. The Red Sox had lost Tony Conigliaro to a bean ball in 1967 and their star pitcher, Jim Lonborg, was lost to a skiing accident in the off-season. 1968 was lost before it started. Clubs struggled to replace these guys and often obliged to trade away future prospects to salvage the season. How do you replace these guys? Another factor that contributed to the domination of the pitcher was speed. Sports was discovering the value of speed to their game. With baseball it clearly affected defense when it was played in stadiums with large outfields. The value of a Paul Blair or a Curt Flood was undeniable. A fast outfield constantly stole base hits or limited the damage done on a large homefield. It was certainly a factor in 1968. Pitchers will make use of a large playing field and a fleet outfield and are less adverse to risk in their pitch selection. Why worry about it when your man can run down nearly everything that's hit out there? These factors by themselves may not appear significant. The arrival of speed in sports concerned athletic development. It was an advantage that players used. Expansion lead to the realization that there wasn't enough talent available to competently cover all the positions in the line-up, and on the field. It also exposed a depth problem which left teams vulnerable to the injury bug. Once key players were lost to injury for the season they were seldom replaced and in turn it would reduce the team's level of quality which mattered against good pitching and defense. They became AAA teams in the majors. It was a perfect storm. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.34.172.103 (talk) 00:17, 20 August 2010 (UTC)

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