does anyone put much into what a team's record is when a certain pitcher is pitching. Example would be tonight's game between Boston's Wakefield 3-0 team record against Texas Thomson 0-4 team record. I remember an oldtimer at the track telling me that's what he would include as one of the top things to consider when capping Baseball. Thanks
Jack, that is a legitimate question. Sometimes a pitcher can be doing real well but does not get the run support from his teamates and in other situations the opposite occurs. A team might get a few runs but that is all the pitcher needs. For instance in the past it would be safe to have 3 runs from Boston with Perdro pitching. I don't know if this is coincedence or not but it is definately worth taking into consideration. I don't feel there is a direct corrulation between hitting from one team and the pitcher they have throwing that day. In a lot of the cases however, Aces will be facing Aces and the pitcher is just not good enough to uphold the teams "inabilities" in hitting. Hope this helps. The Q-man
thanks for the reply, appreciate it. Since subcribing to this awesome site of StatFox, I'd really like to take a shot at capping Baseball, and in doing so I'm looking for things to put in my tool box, so questions dumb as they may seem to me, I'll have to ask. I usually head to the track after I finish with the NBA, but I'm spending all that time trying to learn how to cap Baseball. Thanks again and GL
Another thing to consoder is the way baseball is a game of streaks. It is always helpful to see what a pitchers current form is (last 3 games is usually what I look at). For instance his SO to Walk ratio, hits to innings pitched ratio, and the teams current W/L streak. These are just a few examples of what to look for and not meant to soley base your opinion on. You can go all day and do hours of research to get what you think is the best play on the board and find out it loses 10-1. That's just baseball. But keep in mind, NEVER BET ON A STREAK TO END!!