Scheduling changes for next year
Posted: Mon Jun 15, 2015 6:14 pm
Saw on OHSAA for softball and baseball next year that conference teams will be playing home/away back to back. This will be a major change. Any thoughts?
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I like this rule. Now if they would just limit the innings in softball like baseball all would be good.mglight88 wrote:Saw on OHSAA for softball and baseball next year that conference teams will be playing home/away back to back. This will be a major change. Any thoughts?
What's the beef?Westfan wrote:That's my biggest beef with softball. One girl pitches every game.
Maybe that a TEAM sport can be dominated by a single INDIVIDUAL player? A single player can be a huge factor in basketball, football, soccer, etc., but in those sports you can adjust your game plan to at least attempt to take them out of that dominate position. In softball, there is nothing you can do to offset an extremely talented pitcher. It also takes away any coaching strategy. If you have an incoming 9th grade star pitcher, basically you decide as a coach that for the next 4 years she will pitch every game and give up a run or less, so if we can score 2 runs each game on average, we should win 80-90% of the games.Stretch wrote:What's the beef?Westfan wrote:That's my biggest beef with softball. One girl pitches every game.
Maybe the OHSAA can come up with a handicap system like golf. So if you lose, you still win and feel good about your team. These dominant pitchers just don't fall out of the sky, they have worked many hours to perfect their skill long before they reach HS. So they should be penalized for being good? And a coach should not put their best nine on the field? Sounds like coaches need to build for the future and not just sit around and wait for talent to fall in their laps.4th n Goal wrote:Maybe that a TEAM sport can be dominated by a single INDIVIDUAL player? A single player can be a huge factor in basketball, football, soccer, etc., but in those sports you can adjust your game plan to at least attempt to take them out of that dominate position. In softball, there is nothing you can do to offset an extremely talented pitcher. It also takes away any coaching strategy. If you have an incoming 9th grade star pitcher, basically you decide as a coach that for the next 4 years she will pitch every game and give up a run or less, so if we can score 2 runs each game on average, we should win 80-90% of the games.Stretch wrote:What's the beef?Westfan wrote:That's my biggest beef with softball. One girl pitches every game.