Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Designated hitter

Encyclopedia : D : DE : DES : Designated hitter



 

A designated hitter (often shortened to "DH"), is an official position adopted by Major League Baseball's American League in 1973 that allowed teams to boost sagging offensive performances by designating a player to bat in place of the pitcher. Since then, most amateur and minor leagues have adopted the same or similar rule, but the National League has not. No team is required to use a DH.

The rule

The designated hitter may not play a field position and he may only be replaced by another player not currently in the lineup. However, the designated hitter may change positions to become a position player at any point during the game. However, if he does so, his team forfeits the role of the designated hitter. Thus, the pitcher or a pinch hitter must bat in the newly-opened spot in the batting order.

Background and history

The rationale was that, with a few exceptions, pitchers are usually weak hitters. Babe Ruth was an outstanding all-around player; a prolific hitter who had begun his career as an equally prolific pitcher with the Boston Red Sox, and soon began playing in the field on days he did not pitch (to prevent severe arm injury, a given pitcher will perform once every 5 games). However, Ruth was eventually made a full-time outfielder during his first year as a member of the New York Yankees, 1920, and pitched very sporadically afterward.

On April 6, 1973, first baseman Ron Blomberg of the New York Yankees became the first designated hitter in Major League Baseball history, facing Boston Red Sox right-handed pitcher Luis Tiant in his first plate appearance. "Boomer" Blomberg was walked.

Strategically, the designated hitter offers American League managers two primary options: they can either rotate the role among players, using left-handed hitting DHs against right-handed pitchers and vice-versa, or they can employ a full-time designated hitter. The adoption of the designated hitter rule has virtually eliminated the use of the double switch in the American League.

On June 12, 1997, San Francisco Giants outfielder Glenallen Hill became the first National League player to be the DH in a regular-season game against the American League's Texas Rangers at the Ballpark in Arlington, Texas (now Ameriquest Field in Arlington). When the Milwaukee Brewers moved from the AL to the NL in 1998, the Brewers no longer used the DH on a regular basis.

In recent years, full-time DHs have become rare, and the position has been used to give players a partial off-day, allowing them to bat but rest while the other team is batting. In 2005, only four players, David Ortiz, Travis Hafner, Carl Everett and Raul Ibanez had more than 300 at-bats as a DH.

Controversy and baseball culture

The designated hitter remains a bone of contention, particularly among fans. Baseball purists and National League fans complain that it destroys the symmetry of the game. Baseball prior to the DH was a game in which all players take turns at the plate and in the field; with the designated hitter, the position of pitcher is purely defensive. Traditionally, there are nine players, all of whom bat and all of whom play the field. The pitcher is simply one of these nine players. With the DH, however, there are effectively three different classes of players: eight players who bat and play the field but may not pitch; one player who pitches, but may not bat and may not play any other defensive position; and one player who bats but may not play the field. The DH role may be terminated at any time by letting one of the position players pitch, by letting the pitcher play another position or bat, or by letting the DH play a defensive position. Another purist criticism of the DH is that while theoretically the DH is batting for the pitcher, who occupies the same spot in the lineup as the DH, the pitcher may be inserted into another spot in the lineup when the DH role is terminated, making for an inconsistency with the baseball rule that a player bats in the same spot in the lineup for the entire game. Also, a pitcher may be placed in any spot in the lineup while the team is on defense, but only in the DH's spot when the team is batting, whereas every other substitution in baseball can be made at any time.

The DH also removes some of the strategy elements in late innings, while introducing others. A National League manager must make hard decisions about when to let a pitcher bat or remove him, as well as who to pinch-hit with and where or if that player should take the field afterward, while an American League manager does not face those particular dilemmas. This decision does not, however, generally factor in once a reliever has taken the field, as relievers typically only pitch for an inning or two and seldom would last long enough in the game before being pulled for another reliever (typically the closer) for their spot in the batting order to come up. In this case, the normal strategies involving pinch hitters and defensive substitutions would apply. Conversely, an American League manager in a close game may have to choose whether or not to pitch around a DH in the late innings, possibly granting an intentional base on balls to avoid a potentially hard-hitting slugger in place of a relatively weak pitcher, while an NL manager will not have to choose whether or not to give up a baserunner (and the associated wear and tear on his pitcher's arm) to avoid a DH.

Advocates of the DH point to the fact that it has extended many careers, and, in a few cases, created long, productive careers for players who are weak fielders or have a history of injuries. Edgar Martinez is such an example. Moreover, Hall of Fame members George Brett, Carl Yastrzemski, and Paul Molitor were able to extend their prolific careers by a few years as designated hitters. (Others retort that extending the career of a player that is unable to field is not a recommendation). Fans of the American League style of play further argue that the designated hitter allows pitchers to play deeper into games than they otherwise might, by removing the manager's incentive to remove a pitcher from play in order to attain a short-term offensive advantage, and that since a pitcher's typical offensive "contribution" is at best to get out and at worst as a rally-killing double or triple play, it improves the play of the game to remove an "easy out" player from the batting order (AL fans also point out that the only baseball strategy removed by the addition of the designated hitter is the double switch; if anything, modern AL baseball with its dizzying array of specialist pitchers and batting styles is much more complex than baseball before 1973). Some National League baseball fans also claim that the designated hitter encourages beanball wars by removing the pitcher from the batting order, where he might be subject to retaliation. However, sabermetrics have not borne this out; inside pitching and intentional hit batsmen have actually decreased ([Disputed statementdisputed]