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Sport Sections

Tuesday, March 27
Updated: March 29, 10:28 AM ET
Pitchers have chance to strike back




Here are my thoughts on five key questions going into the 2001 baseball season:

1. What kind of effect will the higher strike zone have and which hitters and pitchers will benefit the most and the least?
Any time a change affects the pitcher-hitter matchup, it will have a big bearing on the season. When the league lowered the mound in 1969 to help the hitters, offensive production picked up. When the strike zone dropped, the hitting numbers continued to improve.

We won't know for a couple of weeks how consistent the umpires will be at calling the high strike. It's easy to call the high strike in spring training because the players are less likely to get upset. And the umpires probably go to the extreme to call the high strike to get the players accustomed to it. But once the season starts, we will see how the hitters respond when they are getting called out on high strikes and their numbers are affected. If the hitters get upset, how will the umpires react? And will baseball back the umpires?

Who can stop the Yankees?
If Nomar Garciaparra were healthy, the Red Sox would be favorites to unseat the Yankees because Manny Ramirez has been added to the mix. The White Sox always have a chance. They have the best all-around hitters in the game. Cleveland played the best down the stretch last year and could have made a big impact in the playoffs if they had made it into the playoffs. Expect Cleveland to have a great season this year.

The A's played better against the Yankees than any other AL team. But remember, everything happened almost perfectly for the A's last season. Will Jason Giambi have an MVP season again? I doubt it, but that doesn't mean he'll have a bad season. Every time they needed a hit last year down the stretch, he got it. That doesn't happen every year.

Just because the A's were great last year doesn't mean they will be this year. I do believe they have a good team, though. Plus, the A's have a lot of young players. Will they have better years than last season? The great thing with young players is they can get better. The A's could be a team that rises to the top, or they can be in the middle of the pack.

The NL is tougher to predict. You always have to start with the Braves simply because they have veteran pitchers. John Smoltz has always been their best postseason pitcher, but he's not 100 percent. I always felt the Cardinals had a good chance last year. With a healthy Mark McGwire back, they are in good shape again and will produce some runs. The Cardinals are on the verge, but it depends on their pitching.

The Giants must get over what happened to them last year, when they were the best team in the regular season in the NL. It's not easy getting over being knocked out of the playoffs in the first round. How will that affect them down the stretch this season? There may be more pressure on them than other teams.

I would go with the Braves, Cardinals, Giants and Mets -- in that order -- as the NL teams with the best shot of being world champions. Everything changes from year to year. Only the consistent teams like the Yankees are at the top every year.
-- Joe Morgan

I've seen it happen before; the umpires start off the year calling the high strike, but then a few superstars get called out. What happens? The strike zone goes back to where it was before. It's a very delicate issue because fans want to see Barry Bonds, Ken Griffey Jr. and Mark McGwire, not get called out on third strikes.

All pitchers will benefit from the high strike zone because it gives the hitter more area to protect with two strikes. The more area a hitter has to cover, the better off the pitcher is. The pitchers who will gain the most from the strike zone are the power pitchers who can pitch upstairs, like Roger Clemens, Pedro Martinez, Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling. Now they can move the ball up a few inches, and the hitter will have to attack pitches that are farther out of the strike zone than they did before. However, a smart pitcher who works down, down, down and then up will have the same effect as a power pitcher who works up in the zone continuously.

In the past right-handed hitters were high-ball hitters, and left-handers were low-ball hitters by nature. Now, all batters are low-ball hitters because that's the only pitch they have had to deal with -- pitches belt-high and below. They developed swings to attack the low pitch and hit the ball out of the ballpark. So the high pitch will affect every hitter. Even the good hitters may not be able to adjust quickly. Hitters don't suddenly change their strokes. McGwire and Bonds won't immediately learn to hit high pitches. It will happen over the course of the season.

2. How far can the Boston Red Sox go without Nomar Garciaparra and how will they compensate for his absence?
The Red Sox will be basically the same team they were last year because they have Manny Ramirez to replace Garciaparra. Last season the Red Sox had Garciaparra, but no Ramirez. They weren't good enough to beat the Yankees last year and shouldn't be again this year without Garciaparra. Ramirez will be as good a run producer as Garciaparra was.

No one knows how good Garciaparra will be when he comes back from the injury after missing all of spring training and trying to get back into playing shape. More than likely, the Red Sox won't immediately get the same Garciaparra who has won two straight batting titles. It will take awhile, especially since he has something wrong with his hand. It's not a good scenario for the Red Sox.

3. What are the keys to this year's Yankees getting the second four-peat in MLB history?
The Yankees' chances will always depend on their bullpen. They have added a great pitcher in Mike Mussina to the rotation. But he is not going to pitch nine innings, and neither will their other starters, who are closer to the end of their careers than the beginning.

The Yankee bullpen, working backwards with Mariano Rivera, is the best. But how do you get to Rivera from the seventh inning on? That will be the key. If Ramiro Mendoza is healthy, the Yankees will be fine. But they will miss Jeff Nelson if Mendoza can't do the job. Their strength had been using Nelson and Jeff Stanton to get to Rivera.

Even though the Yankees' bullpen is the key, they will still be better than everyone else because they know how to play. They weren't the best team last year, but they played the best in the playoffs. In the first half of the season, people were writing off the Yankees, but that wasn't the case. They have veteran players who know how to win. And they have the same group of players.

The A's and the Mariners had a great chance to beat the Yankees in the playoffs, but the Yankees are just smarter. Again, I won't say the Yankees are the best team, but they are the team to beat.

4. Of the non-playoff teams last year, which team in each league is most likely to make the playoffs this season and why?
I expect the Cincinnati Reds, who were not a good team last year, to make a run in the National League and have a solid season. The key will be Griffey, who pulled up lame with a hamstring injury Monday. If he's hurting, it will affect the whole team. Griffey had a bad season last year, but he hit 40 home runs. The rest of the Reds are used to him now. If they can stay healthy, I like their chances, with Griffey, Barry Larkin, Dmitri Young and Sean Casey. The Reds have enough to be a real challenger in the NL.

In the AL, the Rangers can make a run at the playoffs. With as many good players as they have -- such as Alex Rodriguez, Ivan Rodriguez and Rafael Palmeiro -- they will always have a chance. Even with poor pitching, the way the game is played now, a team can outscore the opposition and win games. That approach won't win a championship because in the playoffs the Rangers would face great pitching. But during the season against average teams, they can outscore teams and win enough games to make the playoffs.

5. Is this the year Andruw Jones asserts himself as one of the best all-around players in the game?
We've expected too much from Jones in the past. As a teenager, he was hitting home runs in his first two World Series at-bats. So everyone thought by the age of 20, he would be Griffey. That didn't happen, and it has taken Jones awhile.

I always remember something Tony Oliva said. He won batting championships his first two years. The third year, he didn't win, and people wondered what happened. Oliva said, "Once you're on top, there's only one way to go." People expect a batting title every year, but it's not that easy. He was still a great player.

Jones has had to learn the strike zone and to be more patient. He had to learn more about hitting, and I think he has done that. Jones had an awesome 2000 season. His numbers were great for a young player, and Jones continues to get better as a hitter each year. That's the key to being a great player -- learning more about yourself and how to deal with pitching, and knowing your strengths and weaknesses.







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