Posted by italyprof on 1/9/2016 12:00:00 PM (view original):
You have a point. How to define "pitcher" is tricky, since technically any player can play any position at a given moment in a game. But I bet it could be dealt with somehow. Still, tricky.
As to how common though, since historically teams tended to carry around 8 pitchers (1930s through 1940s), 9 pitchers (1950s) or 10 pitchers (11960s through a few years ago), I don't know if blowouts would be more common than they were historically - maybe two-three times a season at most a team would have some infielder throw knuckleballs to get through a one-sided game. But to make a rule around that rare occurrence?
In any case, the idea that there are now 16 relief pitchers per season that have WHIPs under 1.00, that is that pitch with the quality of Koufax, Joss, Rivera, Pedro or Maddux etc. - meaning half the teams in each league, and that this number has been growing exponentially means we risk a new deadball era sooner or later at this rate, and the weaker benches means fewer fresh pinch-hitters as well.
Well, I simply meant that the event would be more common than now -- in that managers would define more situations as warranting a position player, only having 6 options in his bullpen rather than 7 or 8 -- so while some "7th option" and "8th option" calls would go to the 6th option or others, some would also go to position players.
If we don't define anyone that pitches as a pitcher, then it's open to that exploit -- but a team that can't protect its own pen by throwing a position player in a blowout or long game (the equivalent of when a SIM manager throws a 200K 0% mop-up) is not going to be happy with this.
One option might be to engage international rules for blowouts as well as for long games (ie. 15/10 run rules, as well as 13th inning and beyond free runners) -- but comebacks *do* happen in MLB, even if they're rare, so I'm not sure this is wise. (ie: By doing this, we pretty much eliminate situations in which it would make sense to bring in a position player, as we'd simply end the game before that.)
Yes, the fact that the league batting average is well below the historical average shows us offense is down. Of course, more direct changes can be made to the game to increase the offense while accepting the pitcher quality increase. Mound could be lowered, strike zone could be narrowed (though this could be more frustrating than it's worth), or more extreme options such as adopting composite/aluminum bats could be considered.