New York Daily News

ARMED AND DANGEROUS

Quality and quantity of Met, Yankee pitching puts them on top

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We are three weeks into the season and in case you haven’t noticed there are some phenomenal things happening with the pitching in baseball. For one thing, according to the Elias Bureau, the average 15.2 hits per game through the first 22 days of the season are the lowest since 14.8 in 1910!

There are any number of factors being thrown around for this pitching dominance — the abbreviate­d spring training, the customary unseasonab­le April weather, the increase of pitchers on the rosters, humidors for the baseballs in all the clubhouses, to name four — but going into the weekend the composite pitchers’ ERA of 3.69 was the lowest since 1991 and their 1.61 strikeouts-to walks ratio is the lowest since 1997 (1.60).

Certainly, the number of pitchers at each manager’s disposal — last week MLB and the Players Associatio­n agreed to extend the 14-pitcher limit on the rosters to May 29 — has had a significan­t effect, especially in the later innings (7-9) where the batting average of .224 going into the weekend was the lowest ever. So far this year the 9.32 average number of pitchers in a game is an all-time high. As Sports Illustrate­d’s Tom Verducci noted this week, the Nationals’ Juan Soto faced 46 different pitchers in his first 83 plate appearance­s. So, yes, multiple different looks are hazardous to a batter’s average.

Going into the weekend, both the Yankees and Mets sported the best records in their leagues, and it wasn’t any secret as to why: Pitching. The Yankees’ 2.92 ERA was second in the majors, their 1.15 WHIP eighth. As for the Mets, who were third in the majors in ERA (2.93) and second in WHIP (1.04), Buck Showalter, talking about his starting pitchers in particular, summed up their early success with one word: Command. That was the first thing he noticed about Tylor Megill and David Peterson when he saw them for the first time this spring.

“They could both command,” Showalter said the other day, “and to me that’s the most important thing about pitching. I knew we had something.” And left unsaid, he knew he didn’t have to worry quite as much as to when Jacob deGrom was going to be back.

To Showalter’s point, the Mets’ 3.7 strikeouts-to-walks ratio was second only in the majors to the Dodgers’ 3.8. And through their first 18 starts, the Mets rotation had issued only 27 walks in 106 innings, including just three by Megill in his first four starts.

“You can have good stuff but it’s no good unless you have command. Orel Hershiser once said that if you can command one pitch you can get by in a game and if command two pitches you’re going to be a very good pitcher and if can command three pitches you’re dominant,” Showalter continued. “It’s all about command which is what we constantly emphasize with our guys.”

And don’t talk to Showalter about velocity. As far as he’s concerned you can leave the velo to those one-inning late relievers. If there is one thing that galls him it’s this (analytical­ly driven) obsession with velo in today’s baseball that too often comes at the expense of teaching young pitchers command of their secondary pitches in the minors after they come out of the draft.

“Just look at this year’s upcoming draft,” Showalter said. “It’s been turned upside down by all the injuries to the top pitchers.

They start these kids at 13 years old building up their velo so they can get the big money in the draft and this is what happens. It just seems the criteria with pitchers today is ‘who is going to get back the fastest?’ rather than teaching them secondary pitches.”

Indeed, Alabama left-hander Connor Prielipp, Connecticu­t lefty Reggie Crawford, Arkansas righty Peyton Pallette, Duke righty Henry Williams and Mississipp­i State righty Landon Sims, all of whom were projected to be first-rounders, instead were all felled by elbow injuries and are missing the 2022 season. And last week it was announced that Dylan Lesko, the top-rated prep pitcher who was projected by many to be the overall No. 1 pick, will be undergoing Tommy John surgery.

Conversely, while we were on the subject of command, Showalter blamed the inability of pitchers to command the new baseballs — and not any intent — for the prepondera­nce of Met hitters being hit by pitches this year. A prime theory for the dominance of pitching this season has been the new baseballs that are being kept in humidors and are believed to have been deadened in some way. They are also said to be slicker to the touch.

“Look, I get it that they think they need to pitch our guys high and inside,” Showalter said. “But if you’re going to do that, you better have command or guys are going to get hit in the head — like what’s happened over and over again with our guys. It’s not the pitchers’ fault. They need to be able to get a better grip on the ball. I understand with this sticky stuff a lot of guys took it too far, but there’s a way to solve this. If the batters have pine tar to get a better grip on their bats, give the pitchers a universal pitching rag with an agreed-upon substance which the second base umpire places behind the mound. All the pitchers need is to put something I on two fingertips to control the ball.” f nothing else, Showalter can find consolatio­n in the fact that his pitchers have had few issues with command so far this year.

 ?? AP ?? Tylor Megill and Luis Severino (inset) are two reasons why the Mets and Yankees are tops in MLB so far.
AP Tylor Megill and Luis Severino (inset) are two reasons why the Mets and Yankees are tops in MLB so far.
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