The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

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  • RaychelSnr
    Executive Editor
    • Jan 2007
    • 4845

    #1

    The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?



    Sixty years ago, a player-manager from the Cleveland Indians named Lou Bodreau came up with a defensive strategy to stop Ted Williams' brilliant hitting.

    At the time, Williams was playing some of the best baseball ever -- even compiling a .408 batting average in a single season.

    In an attempt to stop Williams, Bodreau came up with a defensive shift which was unorthodox but ended up effective:

    "[Boudreau] said, this is what I want you to do: See the the stuff I put on the blackboard? When I yell ‘Yo!’, that’s when everybody takes the position that I put on the blackboard,” Russ Schneider, Boudreau’s biographer, told me. “And the players said, ‘What’re you, crazy?’ Even his coaches said the same thing. ‘You can’t do that! How can you do that?’ He said, ‘We’re gonna do it.’”

    What Boudreau was diagramming would eventually go down in baseball lore as the “Ted Williams Shift.” It was a simple case of playing the percentages: Boudreau knew Williams was an extreme pull hitter, and therefore more likely to make an out if more defenders were shifted to the right side of the field. So he rolled out a crazy-looking alignment that packed all four infielders between first and second base..."

    The shift has taken over baseball this year. The number of balls in play hit with a defensive shift on went from under 5% in 2011 to almost 30% of all balls in play this year.

    As offensive numbers go down, there is some talk of banning the shifts in order to boost offensive numbers as one of many rules changes.

    But so long as they're here, are you using defensive shifts in MLB The Show 16? If so, how effective have they been vs. a more traditional defensive alignment?
    OS Executive Editor
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  • bukktown
    MVP
    • Jan 2007
    • 3257

    #2
    Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

    Originally posted by MMChrisS


    [LEFT]Sixty years ago, a player-manager from the Cleveland Indians named Lou Bodreau came up with a defensive strategy to stop Ted Williams' brilliant hitting.

    At the time, Williams was playing some of the best baseball ever -- even compiling a .408 batting average in a single season.

    In an attempt to stop Williams, Bodreau came up with a defensive shift which was unorthodox but ended up effective:



    The shift has taken over baseball this year. The number of balls in play hit with a defensive shift on went from under 5% in 2011 to almost 30% of all balls in play this year.

    As offensive numbers go down, there is some talk of banning the shifts in order to boost offensive numbers as one of many rules changes.

    But so long as they're here, are you using defensive shifts in MLB The Show 16? If so, how effective have they been vs. a more traditional defensive alignment?
    Offline- I didn't have much luck pitching to the shift. My strategy was offspeed pitches to pull shifts and fastballs away to push shifts. I don't know what generates the AI's timing but it seems random and shifting didn't help me.

    Online- it's too exploitable for me to use. Gameplay seems better balanced without shifts

    Comment

    • KBLover
      Hall Of Fame
      • Aug 2009
      • 12172

      #3
      Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

      In The Show, hitters can go against their tendencies at will because the tendencies aren't all that strong.

      They provide some "bonuses" (pull hitters do a bit better pulling the ball) but those hit chart percentages aren't really much of a guide, even if you pitch into them (LH pull hitter - I throw offspeed inside, his bat should really get sped up but he slaps it the other way like he's Wade Boggs or something).

      If hitters could do that consistently (either by ability or mindset), the shift wouldn't be much of a thing in the real game.

      Honestly, I wish the CPU hitters would hit more to their spray charts modified by pitch location and for the Human hitter, make it more difficult to go against a hitter's tendencies.
      "Some people call it butterflies, but to him, it probably feels like pterodactyls in his stomach." --Plesac in MLB18

      Comment

      • Jr.
        Playgirl Coverboy
        • Feb 2003
        • 19171

        #4
        Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

        I utilize shifts a ton, but unfortunately, as others have said, the spray charts aren't represented well when it comes to how hitters make contact in-game. I'd still say it helps more than hurts, but there are times when a guy with 48% pull and 35% up the middle tendency will slap a ball on the ground down the opposite field line for an easy double.
        My favorite teams are better than your favorite teams

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        • jada855
          Pro
          • Aug 2013
          • 942

          #5
          Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

          Yeah hopefully playing defense will be improved in MLB 17! Especially when using player lock! Movement and flexibility will be key but only time will tell!
          Proud member of the 0.04%

          Comment

          • Stout
            Rookie
            • Feb 2012
            • 113

            #6
            Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

            Originally posted by jada855
            Yeah hopefully playing defense will be improved in MLB 17! Especially when using player lock! Movement and flexibility will be key but only time will tell!
            Defense feels so stale and lacks any fluidity, which amazes me because I would've thought by this point Sony would have seen what engine re-hauls can do with games like Madden and FIFA. If you make a diving play, especially on player lock, it just feels so robotic. Granted, I think most Madden players will remember the early issues with the Infinite Engine, but look at where it is now...the engine with MLB TS feels ten years older than it should.
            Patiently waiting for a New York Jets title.Wish me luck.

            Comment

            • NYJin2011tm
              MVP
              • Oct 2011
              • 2760

              #7
              Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

              I hate it and would never use it in the Show or real life. I don't care what the numbers say.


              Speaking of shifts how do you change the infield shifts in the Show 15? I can't seem to figure it out.

              Comment

              • Detroitfan4life1993
                Rookie
                • Jul 2010
                • 485

                #8
                I cant stand shifts irl and never use them in the show
                Psn: DiehardDetroit

                Comment

                • TheWarmWind
                  MVP
                  • Apr 2015
                  • 2620

                  #9
                  Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                  I've managed to use them quite effectively, but I find that I have to treat the spray charts with plenty of skepticism. I also may have to change the shift once I get into a deeper count.

                  Comment

                  • Caulfield
                    Hall Of Fame
                    • Apr 2011
                    • 10986

                    #10
                    Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                    Originally posted by NYJin2011tm
                    I hate it and would never use it in the Show or real life. I don't care what the numbers say.


                    Speaking of shifts how do you change the infield shifts in the Show 15? I can't seem to figure it out.
                    Thats a nice sentiment and I agree about not using it in the show but IRL theres just too much at stake not to use it appropriately . Anyone not willing to adapt will be left behind . And left in the unemployment line . When batters learn to become hitters again the shift will eventually become useless. Then I will rejoice .
                    OSFM23 - Building Better Baseball - OSFM23

                    A Work in Progress

                    Comment

                    • cardinalbird5
                      MVP
                      • Jul 2006
                      • 2814

                      #11
                      Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                      Offline no because they seem too random.

                      Online sometimes but usually is more based off the park I am playing in and to take away bunting. Extreme shifts are too easy to beat with bunts unless you modify it by keeping the 3b at home to guard bunts.

                      One huge problem with shifting online is the pause timer. If you pause it automatically takes 15 sec off then sometimes it will randomly keep your guys in double play depth and sometimes they wont automatically do double play depth. It becomes a pain, very cumbersome and takes away from the fluidity of the game.

                      It needs fixed tbh plus theres no custom shifts, 5 man infields, no choice to concede stolen bases(if up 5 plus you cannot hold runners) or modified double play depth vs faster/slower runners.

                      It needs a ton of work.


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                      • jada855
                        Pro
                        • Aug 2013
                        • 942

                        #12
                        Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                        Originally posted by Stout
                        Defense feels so stale and lacks any fluidity, which amazes me because I would've thought by this point Sony would have seen what engine re-hauls can do with games like Madden and FIFA. If you make a diving play, especially on player lock, it just feels so robotic. Granted, I think most Madden players will remember the early issues with the Infinite Engine, but look at where it is now...the engine with MLB TS feels ten years older than it should.
                        Stout,

                        You have a good point here. I was just thinking the same thing the other day when I thought about posting in the MLB 17 wish list thread.

                        I wondered if the non fluidness of playing defense is tied to the game engine. Granted I am a hardcore baseball fan. But when I play NBA 2k17 the way the players interact with each other on the court just has me dreaming that MLB The Show played with the same type of connection to the experience.

                        I am not a developer but I am a creative and a baseball player. I know it's not the visuals that give me the doscconect from having a realistic baseball experience. But I am not sure where the series is going from a realistic baseball stand point especially when they added the bullet time (non showtime) events on defense that cannot be turned off.

                        So if that's the way of thinking going forward I'm not sure what we will see in MLB 17. There is a big thread on here about defense overhaul I have yet to post there but hopefully it will address player lock defensive issues as well.

                        I have actually been looking for a video of someone player locked at short stop to call for a pick off play and actually get the runner out. I've been trying this since MLB 14 LOL with no luck!

                        I always knew MLB The Show looked the part but couldn't finger until now what was missing and one glaring isssue is that the game doesn't play like baseball especially from a defensive perspective even more glaring when you player lock on defense.
                        Proud member of the 0.04%

                        Comment

                        • Hammerhunker
                          MVP
                          • Mar 2003
                          • 3007

                          #13
                          I think defensive alignment strategy needs to be the next big focus, and have said this in my circles for years. Aside from the occasion shift, bunt coverage, double play depth, the cpu never "adjusts", always straight up,vanilla, generic, zero effort in this area.

                          By the way, Ted Williams hit .406 in 1941 not .408. He did hit .407 in 1953 but with only 93 at bats (http://www.baseball-reference.com/players/w/willite01.shtml)

                          Comment

                          • KBLover
                            Hall Of Fame
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 12172

                            #14
                            Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                            Originally posted by Hammerhunker
                            I think defensive alignment strategy needs to be the next big focus, and have said this in my circles for years. Aside from the occasion shift, bunt coverage, double play depth, the cpu never "adjusts", always straight up,vanilla, generic, zero effort in this area.

                            It seems to be pre-programmed to shift for certain guys, probably based on name (or at least that player's ID) more than reading hit chart and player ability (any player with 85+ power and 40% or more pull tendency, for example).

                            Really see it in my "future" franchise were fictionals and other guys come up into good power hitters with pull profiles and no shift, but Chris Davis comes up - shift. Gallo? No shift - both are powerful LH pull hitters.
                            "Some people call it butterflies, but to him, it probably feels like pterodactyls in his stomach." --Plesac in MLB18

                            Comment

                            • HypoLuxa13
                              MVP
                              • Feb 2007
                              • 1156

                              #15
                              Re: The Shift is Taking Over Baseball, But What About The Show?

                              As others have said, spray charts have much less impact on the Show than in real life. I've always assumed it had more to do with the "dice roll" that happens when comparing the hitter attributes against the pitcher attributes, and when they get combined against the pitch location and timing of the swing to produce the batted ball or swing and miss outcome, I don't believe the tendencies of the batter actually impact this as much as it should. I've been burned against the CPU many, many times against guys like Ortiz, Adrian Gonzalez, Rizzo, etc. At seemingly a much higher rate than these guys are able to do in real life.

                              Edit: additional thought about the "dice roll", this also seems to be part of the reason why we so SO MANY opposite field home runs in The Show, even for players in real life who basically never hit opposite field home runs.
                              Last edited by HypoLuxa13; 10-15-2016, 12:00 PM.

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