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Bunt & Run or Run & Bunt
by Dave
Thursday, April 22, 2010
I've been away from the blog for a while. I know it has been too long but I am in observation mode. There are a ton of games around now as age group travel ball gets into full gear and the school ball season rolls along towards championship season. In all levels of play, I am aware that "baserunning" often decides games. But "baserunning" is an overly broad topic. It really encompasses almost everything on the offensive side of the game including and especially the short game. While the high school games I have observed are beginning to demonstrate a decreased value to the short game due to the increased pitching distance, it is still an important tool. While it used to determine the outcome of most competitive games, it still can determine such. In age group play at 14U and lower ages, the short game is still absolutely key. And within this aspect of the game, I have often seen what I think is a critical fundamental mistake.
When a team finds itself in a sacrifice situation, usually it looks something like this: The game is close, say 0-0, 1-0, 2-0, 2-1. One run will put one team up, tie the game or maybe expand the lead to 3 so as to force the opponent into different choices when it is on offense. A batter walks or gets a hit with one or no outs. The next batter comes up and is signaled to bunt. Sometimes she gets it down, sometimes she does not.
We have discussed the subject of bunting at length. Every single player ought to be able to put down a bunt when needed. It doesn't matter if you are hitting .500 with mostly extra-base hits or loads of home runs. At some point, your team is going to face a tight situation and need you to get one down. But we've been over and over that and it is not the fundamental issue of the day.
Many girls will be told to sacrifice and come out with a drag bunt. Generally, when male coaches see that, they go nuts. Often they are right to complain at the batter that "you were supposed to sacrifice, not bunt for a hit." I, too, see that as a fundamental mistake but I have to admit that not everyone would agree. Jessica Mendoza, for one, notes that she always felt more comfortable dragging. She was not good at bunting in the conventional sacrifice manner. She was a very good drag bunter and very often had successful sacrifices on drag bunts. So I suppose there is some room for disagreement on this fundamental issue. And, again, this is not the fundamental of the day.
The fundamental of the day involves the actions of the baserunner who is being moved. Most often, I see a girl, say at first, get off the bag like she would on any other play, freeze, and then watch to see what happens on the bunt. If the ball is popped into the air, she may even take a step back towards the bag before waiting to see what actually happens to the ball. If the bunt is done "angle down," obviously going to hit the dirt, she may turn tail and run all out. She watches the fielder covering the bag to see if there is an incoming throw and slides if she thinks there is. The real fun occurs when the ball is struck fairly solid and, for a tenth of a second, the baserunner is not sure whether it will go up or down. She holds for that one tenth and then acts in accordance with what the ball does.
This sort of baserunning play is really what should be called "bunt and run" because it involves no particular unusual act on the part of the baserunner until the bunt takes place, until ball and bat collide. 99 times out of 100 pure sacrifices, this is what happens, at least in the games I have watched. They are "bunt and run" plays, bunt first, run second.
If a squeeze is the play of the moment, it seems like about 50/50 between the bunt and run, and the run and bunt. A squeeze with bunt and run is a "safety squeeze." A squeeze with run and bunt is a "suicide squeeze." A third kind of play happens when a team does what I'll call a "double safety squeeze" which involves the runner getting off third, waiting for the bunt, and then waiting for the fielder to attempt to throw out the bunter at first. This is really not a squeeze at all and is a somewhat unaggresive play. It often works in 12U travel ball, sometimes backfires in 14U, works only against poorly prepared 16U or 18U teams, and shouldn't happen much beyond that, although, quite often, a weak throwing, poorly drilled first or second baseman is incapable of making the play to home as it should be executed.
What troubles me at the moment is the tendency of most teams to use run and bunt only on suicide squeezes. The team that aggressively squeezes whenever the opportunity presents, many times does not play so aggressively on sacrifice situations when the run first, bunt second approach is highly advisable and successful every time your bunters have been well prepared. This seems insane to me. You've just got to run before the bunt against some teams despite the risks.
It occurs to me that nobody wants to be doubled up at any time. But this is almost unavoidable. I can't count the number of times when some baserunner got off the bag, then took off on a very hard hit, stopped as everybody in the place yelled because the SS made a diving catch and now has an opportunity for the DP, and then looked as if she would like to die as the throw was made, doubling her off. Then her parents (maybe a few others!) started screaming at her from the sidelines.
This dynamic occurs very often in my world, whether it is my team getting doubled up, my team making the DP, or some game I am watching for the heck of it. I just don't understand why people get so upset when some kid makes a great play which allows her to double the runner. It just happens and it is nobody's fault, not the base coach, not the runner, nobody. But every time it happens, it produces an even greater aversion to being doubled off for that k9id, her coach, for everyone. The coaches, all of the kids in the dugout of the team at bat, and everybody else in the place watching or participating in the game thinks, "I'm glad that wasn't me." The kid who gets doubled up vows that this will never happen again, assuming I live through the day.
This avoidance of being doubled off at all costs seems to make sense, doesn't it? It is a rally killer. It seems like it can make you lose. We're at 0-0 in the 4th and finally get a runner on base. Somebody finally hits a good shot but it gets caught. The runner at first is doubled off. Those are our last baserunners in that game and we go on to lose 1 zip. That play lost us the game, right? No it didn't. Lots of other plays and at bats lost us the game. That was just an unfortunate accident.
Worse still is when a sacrifice is called and the baserunner misjudges the ball off the bat. She gets off, waits for contact, sees it and runs. The only problem is the balled was popped right at the 3B! Double play, get off the bases, you!
I get weirded out when I see people getting upset on plays like this. Oh, my first reaction is something like "how did you get doubled off? Weren't you paying attention?" But then my better nature kicks in as I remember all the people I have seen doubled off. I also recognize that if the SS or 3B hadn't made a good play and instead merely knocked the ball down and then got the runner moving from first to second because she got a late jump, I would be just as upset and so would everyone else.
What bearing does this have on bunt and run, run and bunt? Is that not obvious?
Any very good team, one you are hopefully going to see as you make your way through better tournaments, is going to have practiced getting the lead runner on sacrifices. If they have significant talent on defense, they are going to kill some of the lead runners you tried to move and make your team's sacrifice attempt into an out you handed them on a platter. You'll be left thinking, "gee whiz, we haven't had many baserunners and even when we do, we can't move them!" You'll be mentally defeated.
Some teams will attempt to play things in a manner they see as aggressive. The coach at third will signal the baserunner to steal and the batter to sacrifice. The thought is, this is basically the same thing as a run and bunt. But you have still left your baserunner with her natural aversion to being doubled off. She is only going to have .5 of a second to get off the base and then she'll see or hear the contact. That makes her just over 10 feet from the bag as your bunter taps the ball. If she is one of those good kids, she is going to put her head down and steal like you envisioned. But as soon as she hears or sees the ball hit bat, she is going to freeze in near panic. What if the bunt goes into the air and is caught? I am going to get doubled off. I don't want that to happen! And that is exactly what you do not want her to be thinking.
As a coach, you really need to explain the difference between a bunt and run, and a run and bunt. You need to explain that the run and bunt is a deliberate strategy which is being practiced because there are going to be times when we cannot bunt and run, when we cannot count on being able to steal a base, when the likelihood of a passed ball or wild pitch is about as likely as the snack bar serving sushi. Sometimes, we are going to get into a tight game and we will need the runner at first or second to run and not worry about the bunt being a bad one, popped into the air. When this happens and the runner is doubled off, it is the fault of the play call, not of the baserunner.
Does this make sense to you? If not, I'm not explaining it correctly. There are going to be times when, maybe you are playing a top 10 or 50 (on a national basis) team and they are able to almost completely shut down bunt and run because they are that good. They have great pitchers. But so do you. You get only a handful of baserunners in the game but your kids are playing this thing to a stalemate. If you can get a runner to second or third, the next kid just might get that critical base hit and provide you the 1-0 lead you may be able to hold onto. But if you try to bunt and run, all you will end up with is another out and a runner at the same base.
Sometimes, when you are playing very good teams, they do not even look to make sure they can get the lead runner. Instead, they are so confident of their ability that they simply always try to get her. Sometimes such a team has a play which requires the fielders to go after the lead runner on sacrifices. If a coach gets overly confident in his or her team's ability to nail the lead runner, he or she may be in a bad habit of automatically calling that play. It has worked the last 20 times, why not now?
There is a very good possible outcome when you go with run and bunt against such teams. It is entirely possible that your runner will beat the throw because she has that slight edge of not waiting to see ball hit ground. If you are in a sacrifice situation, you run and bunt, the play is made on the lead runner, and she is safe, you may just demoralize your opponent. Like I said, maybe they have gotten the lead out the last 20 times, maybe every time they have tried it this year. Your team beats them at their own game. Now they might just think, "oh no! We have finally met a team which is better than us!!"
Of course, let's not forget that by using run and bunt, we are taking a risk. I hope that your bunters can get one down. If they tend to pop it into the air, well, your risk goes up. But that is neither the fault of the runner nor the fault of the play. That is the fault of your bunting instruction and preparation.
It is important to note that, just like the suicide squeeze, assuming your opponent has a very good catcher on whom you cannot steal, the batter must get the bat on the ball when you run and bunt. She can foul it off. She cannot pop it up to the catcher or another fielder. She must make every attempt to protect the runner.
Your batters should be taught that if your team does a run and bunt, and the hitter absolutely cannot so much as tap the ball, she still needs to make that bunt attempt with the bat and make sure that the bat crosses within the receiving view of the catcher. You are not looking for out and out interference but rather a healthy amount of distraction. If the pitch is eye high and the hitter cannot possibly get it down, remember, the catcher is going to catch that ball in just about the perfect position to throw out our runner. We have to foul it off and, if we cannot, we have to at least have our bat cross the catcher's field of view. This may be enough to cause her to miss the ball, however slightly, or perhaps make a poor throw. But we cannot allow the catcher to merely experience an iteration of throw-out the runner practice.
Batters cannot feel as if they are able to return to the dugout innocent of any charges because "there was no way I could bunt that pitch." If they do not even put their bats in front of the catcher and get a strike on them because they went, they have failed. It wasn't the baserunner's fault that she got thrown out on a failed steal attempt. It was the batter's fault for not protecting the runner.
Well, that's pretty much it. This is an easy fundamental concept. But unfortunately, I seldom see run and bunt utilized. Everybody seems to use it only in suicide situations. When they do use it for sacrifices, they typically do so by invoking a steal and bunt simultaneously without ever cluing in their players. That is not the best of all possible situations because your baserunners still have the natural aversion to being doubled off which may cause the momentary hesitation that gets her thrown out. Instead, explain to your team what the difference between bunt and run, and run and bunt is. Then you'll be able to execute it when necessary. It may win you a critical game. You may also want to explain this to the parents so they don't yell at their kids should they be the ones who get doubled up every once in a while!Labels: baserunning, Bunt, coaching, game strategy
 
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