What do pitchers do when resting




















Toss easy on side lines. Jog 10 poles; 10 sets of 60 yard sprints. Play catch and drill work. Run sprints. Jog - stretch - shag B. P for pitcher. No running or sprint work. The same goes for the walk, hit and home run numbers, and that collective game score of On top of all this is the teams' record in these 54 games. Clubs that have trotted starting pitchers out on short rest since have won 20 games and lost True, wins and losses often have little to do with how good the starting pitching was on a particular day.

That record is worth pointing out in this case, however, because it shows how teams that have started pitchers on short rest in recent postseasons haven't tended to get the desired effect.

Knowing all this, the programmed reaction we have to a team deciding to start a pitcher on short rest in the postseason is a valid one. The likelihood of the decision backfiring would appear to be higher than that of the decision having the desired effect.

Short version: History says that starting a pitcher in a playoff game on short rest isn't going to pay off. But we're not done here. For beyond the question of how starting a pitcher on short rest actually pans out lies the question of whether starting a pitcher on short rest can screw him up. The aftermath isn't the most pressing concern when a team decides to start a pitcher on short rest in the postseason. Making it count in the moment at hand is.

But it's not an unimportant issue. After all, any team that starts a pitcher on short rest is planning on extending its stay in the postseason. It does so knowing that the pitcher starting on short rest will be needed again if it advances.

Concerning our collection of pitchers, one limitation is that not all of the guys who started a postseason game on short rest got the opportunity to make another start.

Most saw their teams get eliminated. A lucky few helped clinch the World Series. But within the window, there have been 22 cases of pitchers going on to make additional postseason starts after starting on short rest, and they've made a total of 40 additional starts as well as some relief appearances, but I ignored those since the idea here is to evaluate these guys as starters.

Here's a table just like the one above, save for one small difference. If a given pitcher has more than one start listed, the number in the Game Score column is the average Game Score of those starts. There's more yellow here than there was in the first table, and that's obviously a good thing. After starting on short rest, a good chunk of these pitchers basically went on to pitch like themselves in the additional starts they made. And while he's not highlighted, it is worth noting that CC Sabathia was pretty darn good after the first of two short-rest starts in Estimates indicate each pitch thrown in the preceding game increased earned run average ERA by 0.

Each pitch averaged in the preceding 5 and 10 games increased the ERA by 0. Older pitchers were more sensitive to cumulative pitching loads than younger pitchers were, but they were less affected by pitches thrown in the preceding game. Related Articles. Preventing Overuse Injuries in Young Athletes. Young Athlete with Knee Pain? It Might Be a Growth Spurt. Trending Topics. What Parents Need to Know.



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