Switch hitter Ralph Henriquez of the Brooklyn Cyclones squares off against switch pitcher Pat Venditte of the Staten Island Yankees in this comedic ballet of minor-league baseball blunder.
(Remaining description via
Hardball Talk)
The New York Yankees are going to pitch Pat Venditte in Tuesday's split-squad game against the Atlanta Braves at the specific request of manager Joe Girardi.
Venditte is a 24-year-old reliever who was 4-2 with 22 saves last season in 49 appearances split between Class A Charleston and Tampa. So why all the fuss over the 45th-round draft pick out of Creighton University?
Put simply, Venditte is one-of-a-kind, a "switch-pitcher" who is equally adept at throwing with his left or right hand. He is the only such talent in professional baseball, and Girardi is intrigued. Frankly, who wouldn't be? Venditte wears a specially made six-fingered glove that includes two thumbs, and his minor league teammates have been known, according to one report, to call him "octopus."
Not only that, Venditte appears to be a lot more than some circus act. He compiled a 1.87 ERA and a 1.069 WHIP last summer, striking out 87 while walking only 11 in 67.1 innings. His talent also caused an unintended comedy routine of sorts to break out in 2008 when he was matched up against a switch-hitter (see video), which led to new rules being put into play by the Professional Baseball Umpire Corporation.
8 Comments
KnivesOutsays...Fantastic sift.
rychansays...Wow, I'm kind of surprised this hasn't been resolved before. But baseball always has been annoying with the infinite time-outs that the batter or pitcher can call. I guess this needs to be resolved (or maybe it already has) by forcing one of them to commit (most likely the batter) before each pitch.
Shepppardsays...Ahh, thanks kevlar. I'd forgotten how much I loved baseball.
NordlichReitersays...So long as the pitcher never engages the rubber he can stand on his fucking head. By engaging the rubber I mean putting his non free foot on any part of the rubber. Non free foot is the Foot that the pitcher will leave in contact with the rubber until the end of his delivery.
http://mlb.mlb.com/mlb/official_info/official_rules/objectives_1.jsp
KnivesOutsays...*promote
siftbotsays...Promoting this video back to the front page; last published Thursday, April 1st, 2010 10:25pm PDT - promote requested by KnivesOut.
MrFisksays...I was expecting to watch a porno.
antsays...I thought that said Hitler.
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