681 V2 ch153 (1/2)

The Hitting Zone half_empty 32100K 2022-07-23

The batter behind me came out swinging, making contact, hitting the ball to the third baseman. He threw him out at first for the third and final out of the inning.  I jogged back to the dugout and received some smiles and congratulations on my RBI single.

I thought Coach Leroy would be happy with what I was abled to do, but on my way out to take the field, he made eye contact with me. ”Let's talk when you get back.”

I gulped. My movements became sluggish as I head to my position. Talk? Talk about what? Did I do something wrong?

With a pitching change, our warmup was slightly longer than usual, giving me extra time to overthink.

From the bottom of the lineup, batter number eight led off. He struck out swinging, bringing up the ninth. I was still stuck in my head but a 'ding' of the bat got my attention. The ball soared to the corner of left field, landing fair. Landon chased it and picked it up, throwing the ball to the shortstop as I covered second. The batter easily reached without having to slide.

Dang it. That's right. The pitcher would be replaced with a pinch hitter. This isn't the time to have wandering thoughts.

We came back to the top of the lineup. The new pitcher was just as shaken as I was by the double. He threw a wild pitch, hitting the leadoff batter near the knee. The batter went down, in pain. The coaches from his team, including Zeke, came out to check on him.

The pitcher took off his hat and looked at the player apologetically. The first baseman made a move to the mound, signaling for the rest of us infielders to follow.

The catcher also came, speaking up first. ”Hey, don't panic. You'll just make things worse for yourself.”

”Don't say that.” The first baseman scolded him before looking at the pitcher. ”Stay calm. Take a few extra breaths. You only get to face so many batters so make the most of it.”

The pitcher nodded and took a deep breath, slowly letting it out. We stayed with him as the coaches checked out the injured batter. He was soon escorted off the field towards an athletic trainer. Team two replaced him with a pinch runner. He must be hurting pretty bad.

With the change made, everyone went back to their positions and batter two stepped up. He missed the first two pitches, getting stuck in an 0-2 count. He held back from swinging at a ball just outside the zone, 1-2. He got under the next pitch, popping it up to the first baseman. Infield fly rule, automatic out, the runners stayed on first and second.

(AN: reminder: the rule exists to prevent the defense from executing a double or triple play by deliberately failing to catch a ball that an infielder could catch with ordinary effort.)

”Jake.” Coach Leroy greeted, making me freeze in place. ”Come here for a second.” He waved for me to follow him.

I dragged my feet amidst the stares from my teammates.

Coach Leroy took me to the little hallway that led to the club room of Stanford's baseball team. The area had been marked as off-limits but with the head coach here, it's not like I could get in trouble. We stopped in the middle of the tunnel. ”Let's talk about your at-bat.”

I gulped. ”W-w-what about it..?” My voice cracked, making me blush with embarrassment.

”You're not in trouble, Jake.” Coach Leroy assured me. ”I just want to talk about it. Get your thoughts on why you did what you did.”

”Why I did what I did..?” I repeated, confused. ”...I hit the ball...and drove in a run..?”

He chuckled. ”I know what you did. But why? I heard from Coach Nate and Rhys yesterday, that you were interested in trying to hit homeruns?”

I nodded.

”Then why not go for it?”

”I thought about it.” I admitted. ”But, there was two outs, a runner on third. You said that we should win this game. I didn't want to mess up and hit a fly out or something, so I played it safe. Get a hit to score the run.” I pinched my fingers together, nervous.

Coach Leroy nodded, thoughtfully. ”I see. Your thinking isn't wrong, but it's not exactly right either. If we were losing by one, that might make sense. However, it's a tie game. Most importantly, it's early. It's better to take chances early on in a game. Especially for someone as good as yourself.”