That's when it happens.
“When I do that, the catchers, they might think that I am not swinging (for) the ball and they try to reach the ball while I am swinging,” Robert said through a translator. “I think that's the reason why in my case.”
The end result is often interference, putting Robert on first base and handing an error to the catcher. It has happened to Robert five times already this season, and he is far from alone.
Through Thursday's big league games, there have been 57 catcher interference calls, up from 38 at the same point last year. The number was 35 through
Since 1974, the highest single-season total for catcher interference calls is 74 last year, followed by 62 in 2021.
The increase has caught the attention of players and managers around the league.
“We try to pinpoint which guys that, yeah, we have to be careful with that could bring a catcher's interference,” said
“I'll yell at him, ‘Hey, it looks pretty close,’” Ross said. “It's less him and more the batter. And even we slowed one down in the dugout the other day, and I mean it just barely missed his glove. So it's definitely on the radar.”
Under MLB's catcher interference rule, the batter is awarded first if any fielder interferes with him during a pitch. It happens most often when a hitter gets a piece of the catcher's glove with his bat.
When catcher interference is called, the play is allowed to continue in case the outcome is more advantageous for the offensive team than the interference. If the interference call is accepted, the catcher is charged with an error. The hitter is marked down for a plate appearance but not an at-bat, and reaching first doesn't affect the player's on-base percentage.
One of the biggest factors in the increase is pitch-framing metrics that look favorably on catchers that receive the ball closer to the plate.
Robert,
“Just trying to get closer to the hitter, closer to home plate," Hedges said. "Helps with receiving. It’s one of the main adjustments I’ve made this year and my receiving has been significantly better than it’s been in a long time and that’s the main reason. I’d rather not have catcher’s interferences, but if a few of them in a season is the price to pay for leading the league in receiving, then I’ll do it.”
Moving closer to the plate helps catchers with framing pitches for strikes, or what Ross describes as “presenting the ball as best you can for the umpire and getting the best calls.” Catching the ball early is especially helpful when it comes to lower pitches.
With Major
“The stats, the metrics say the closer you are, the better you’ll be at receiving. ... It’s what I’m trying to do,” Hedges said. "I’m trying to find that happy ground of not being too close but being as close as I can to get to as many pitches as I can.”
While moving closer might help with catching metrics, some of the interference plays have been costly. The resulting baserunners from 16 of the 57 calls this season have come around to score, according to
The Angels'
The athletic Robert, who is a threat to score from first on extra-base hits, knows the importance of getting on base — however it happens. But an interference play also disrupts his ability to take advantage of a pitch he likes.
“You have like the two faces of the coin,” Robert said.
___
AP Sports Writer
___
Follow
___
AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports
© 2023 The Canadian Press. All rights reserved., source