This is the worst I’ve seen in the 6 years I’ve watched Dodgers baseball. Hunter’s scorecard.


This is the worst I’ve seen in the 6 years I’ve watched Dodgers baseball. Hunter’s scorecard.

14 comments
  1. 67% called strike accuracy.. wow… that is absolutely horrible..

    I’ll have to pay attention to that from now on but I don’t know if I’ve ever seen that number be below high 70s.. 67% is insanity..

  2. Honestly surprised it favored the Yanks, Kersh was getting so many calls with that glove side fastball

  3. At least the second game this week where the Yanks were favored over .25 too…

  4. I’m fairly certain I could step in there this afternoon and at least get a 67% called strike accuracy

  5. Those calls were legitimately tragic. When even my wife walking by says “that wasn’t a strike that was a ball” then you know it was WAY off.

  6. He was consistently awful all night and I thought it was just comical. I didn’t think he favored either team.

  7. It’s crazy to me that they didn’t say that top of the zone “strike” wasn’t a more impactful call. That strike there, if you don’t remember, was to Max Muncy and was one of the differences between him flying out and him walking. I was at the game and saw the catcher move his glove so high and the ump still called it a strike. A few batters later Jason Heyward rips a no doubt double which would’ve surely scored Muncy leading to a loss of 1 run which ultimately didn’t matter but God damn that ump

  8. Kershaw was getting fastballs in off the plate (especially to righties) called for strikes all night. I was surprised the Yankee pitchers weren’t trying to put the ball in those same spots. Then again good luck beating mookie and dills to that spot.

  9. What I love is that Kershaw realized the zone was huge, and used it all night long. If you look closely, you’ll see him smiling on some of those strikeouts. The thing is that he was just accurate enough to use it, and the Yanks weren’t.

  10. I can live with it as long as its consistent for both teams and doesn’t end up favoring one or the other. But it has to be tough for today’s players who are so dialed in on the “true” strike zone.

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