"I am not one who was born in the custody of wisdom. I am one who is fond of olden times and intense in quest of the sacred knowing of the ancients." Gustave Courbet

17 July 2012

Quixote.


There's a certain bit of Don Quixote that comes to mind when discussing Tigers third-base coach Gene Lamont.

And not just because Lamont is better known as "The Human Windmill."

It's easy to criticize when Lamont makes a decision that turns out poorly, like when he waved Brennan Boesch home in the ninth inning against Baltimore last weekend.

Replays showed left fielder Endy Chavez had the ball in his hand before Boesch reached third base. Predictably, Boesch was out by a mile.

Tigers manager Jim Leyland backed Lamont, saying, "You've got to make him make the throw. Two out, absolutely. You've got to make 'em make the play."

The fact is, Boesch probably was going to be out if Lamont sent him. The ball was just hit too shallow.

Yet, Boesch probably was going to be stranded if Lamont held him, too.

More often than not, the decision to send the runner pays off. This day, it was the exception to the rule.


Read the rest at The Detroit News.

The way we're wasting runners on base, we've GOT to be aggressive rounding third. GOOD CALL, COACH!

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