(Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)
Looking at this from the other perspective, if Street has to force himself to "get on top of the ball" more because he can't throw a strike to the outside corner otherwise, shouldn't he now be susceptible to having the ball run back over the middle of the plate when he's trying to throw inside to lefties? If he gets lazy or fatigued and doesn't get the proper sink on the ball, now he's susceptible to allowing doubles and homers, rather than walks.
Yet, just the opposite has happened, he's allowed fewer extra base hits, but more walks.
It still comes down to making sure his mechanics are maintained properly, which he can (theoretically) do from either side of the rubber. The real reason for his marked improvement, I think, is that the Rockies' level of competition has changed drastically from the first three weeks of the season.
Street faced the Dodgers and Phillies, ranked No. 1 and 2 in the National League in runs scored, in six of his first nine games, and his ERA took a beating for it.
Of the 24 games since, 12 have come against teams in the bottom half of the majors in run scoring. Among those, San Diego, Houston, and Seattle are three of the five worst teams in baseball at scoring runs.
To me, that makes a lot more sense than four-tenths of an inch difference causing Huston Street to finally get his mechanics straightened out, and this after having been pretty darned successful in the first 247 games of his major league career.
Olney closes that portion of the blog post this way:
Street cited something that Troy Tulowitzki said recently -- that the Rockies are beginning to expect good things to happen. "You don't know whether success creates that mentality, or whether that mentality creates success," Street said. "I think it's a little bit of both."
Look, pal, that's just plain lazy.
When I was in college, I spent a lot of time studying the Bible with friends from my InterVarsity Christian Fellowship group, using something they called the "inductive method" of study, which essentially seeks to determine what the original author meant to convey to his or her original audience.
In a group of 10 or 15 students or more, we would discuss one small section at a time, say, 10-15 verses of the Gospel of Mark, and inevitably, at least once per session, we would come to some kind of impasse.
One student would suggest that Mark was trying to say this, and another would suggest he was trying to say that, with both interpretations being mutually exclusive, of course. After a while, someone would suggest that, "Maybe it's a little bit of both!"
This happened so often and so consistently, that we coined a term for it: "The Relativistic Third Option." Sometimes, it might have been the best way to interpret something, as certain passages can be interpreted in several ways, none of which is inherently inconsistent with the rest of scripture.
But usually, we were just being lazy. It's often hard work to figure out which of two mutually exclusive options is the correct one, and in this world of post-modern ideas and tolerance and relativism, people are too often satisfied with wuss-out explanations like, "It's a little bit of both."
Either your "winning mentality" put you in a position to help make good things happen, or you got lucky, started to win, and then tried to think about what else you could do to help the team win more. There is no such thing as "a little bit of both" in this case.
Why doesn't anybody ever just say, "I don't have any idea"?















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