Thursday, April 17, 2008

Slaughter rule

I'm going to go ahead and guess that relief pitching isn't something they really use in Japanese high school baseball:
A Japanese high school pleaded for a regional game to be abandoned after surrendering 66 runs in less than two innings, local media reported on Thursday.

The coach of Kawamoto technical high school threw in the towel to spare his pitcher's arm with his team losing 66-0 with just one batter out in the bottom of the second.

The hapless hurler had already sent down over 250 pitches, allowing 26 runs in the first inning and 40 in the second before Kawamoto asked for mercy.

"At that pace the pitcher would have thrown around 500 pitches in four innings," Kawamoto's coach was quoted as saying. "There was a danger he could get injured."
Dude. In the Major Leagues over here, most pitchers never throw more than a hundred pitches in a whole game, much less a couple of innings. You'd think that the coach might have suspected his pitcher was struggling after, say, the first ten or fifteen runs he gave up in the first inning.

I hope the poor kid didn't go off and do anything rash afterward.

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