Opponent batting average against Hellickson is something like .111 the first two times, and over .600 the third. Saying he’s not successful the third time through the lineup is an understatement. A manager’s job is to set the players up for success, and in the curious case of Jeremy Hellickson, that means being quick with the hook, and getting him out of there before the trouble begins, not after. Absolutely the right move, even if he’s thrown only 55 pitches and not given up any runs.
I posted this on tonight's game thread. Sunday 5/13
Kind of misleading. 3rd time facing hitters:
This year______ 7 for 12 = .583
Career______ 293 for 1062 = .276
2016__________46 for 182 = .253
Making decisions based on 12 ABs is not smart.
Hellickson was offered and took the $17M QO after his 2016 season and has shown he can go through a lineup 3 times when he is pitching well. He has been pitching well and should be given the opportunity to throw more than 50 or 60 pitches and save the bullpen.
Martinez has shown that he is not smart enough to make decisions based on what is happening right in front of him and instead is making decisions based on 12 ABs that happened in the past. In my opinion I don't think being a bench coach qualifies you to be a manager any more than doing what FP or Bob does. I think it's better to have experience being a MLB or minor league manager making decisions instead of watching someone else do it. Martinez spends too much time trying to be one of the guys in the clubhouse and too much time seeking attention the rest of the time. I haven't seen one thing that makes me think he is a MLB manager.