I'm talking about the college game in the aggregate, not just us.
Problem: Too much offense + the pitching is lousy compared to historical norms
Solutions:
1. Go to wooden bats. If some schools whine about not being able to afford it, then take up a collection from your fans at the game. Also, the sound of the crack of hickory on leather is like the opening notes of some great symphony to the ears.
2. Require the umps to enforce the strike zone as written in the rules. That means the upper end of the zone goes higher by a half foot or so. The definition and a diagram are below. Look at the bold words and the diagram. The top 1/5 to 1/4 of that strike zone is called a "ball" by 80%+ of college umps.
3. A slightly wider home plate. This goes with the strike zone. Most umps call "strike" on pitches up to 3-4" outside the plate, and sometimes inside the plate. Make the umps play it straight, and widen the plate a little to keep the strike zone just as broad (but it will extend higher by around 1/2 a foot as described above and as shown below).
NCAA 2-75 Strike Zone
Strike Zone
SECTION 75. The area over home plate from the bottom of the kneecaps to the midpoint between the top of the shoulders and the top of the uniform pants. The strike zone shall be determined from the batter’s stance as the batter is prepared to swing at a pitched ball (see diagram below).
NCAA 2-75 Strike Zone - Baseball Rules Academy
Problem: Too much offense + the pitching is lousy compared to historical norms
Solutions:
1. Go to wooden bats. If some schools whine about not being able to afford it, then take up a collection from your fans at the game. Also, the sound of the crack of hickory on leather is like the opening notes of some great symphony to the ears.
2. Require the umps to enforce the strike zone as written in the rules. That means the upper end of the zone goes higher by a half foot or so. The definition and a diagram are below. Look at the bold words and the diagram. The top 1/5 to 1/4 of that strike zone is called a "ball" by 80%+ of college umps.
3. A slightly wider home plate. This goes with the strike zone. Most umps call "strike" on pitches up to 3-4" outside the plate, and sometimes inside the plate. Make the umps play it straight, and widen the plate a little to keep the strike zone just as broad (but it will extend higher by around 1/2 a foot as described above and as shown below).
NCAA 2-75 Strike Zone
Strike Zone
SECTION 75. The area over home plate from the bottom of the kneecaps to the midpoint between the top of the shoulders and the top of the uniform pants. The strike zone shall be determined from the batter’s stance as the batter is prepared to swing at a pitched ball (see diagram below).
NCAA 2-75 Strike Zone - Baseball Rules Academy
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