Sir Cohen's pitchers should be able to pitch around a batter, I.E. throw a ball (outside of strike zone). I know baseball and I know what a college player/pitcher, let alone SEC player/should be able to throw a ball. "DON'T GIVE THIS GUY ANYTHING TO HIT, NO STRIKES." That is the easiest thing to do as a pitcher. Hell, I haven't played in 7 years, wasn't a pitcher, and could go pitch around any hitter on the planet. Its easy to throw where you are looking, especially when you aren't looking to throw a strike, and these kids throw every day. Cohen can say whatever the 17 he wants in a press conference to cover his ***. You believe everything you hear? Were you out there on the mound when he gave the instructions? Do you have Cohen "Miked UP" for every game? Maybe you do, with your ESPN segment. Shouldn't one of our SEC caliber pitchers be able to throw a ball when instructed to? Who's fault is it if they cant? The guy grilling hotdogs in left field or the guy labeled head coach? Can you admit it ever if you are wrong? I'm guessing you will either twist these questions into something I wrote about Mahtook, since you are a master at that or you will defer it to something someone you know, that played in the bigs a few weeks, told you they saw happen one time on a full moon.
So what you are saying is, a UM outfielder allowing a semi hard ground ball to go under his glove is execution and putting pressure on the defense? Or LSU blowing a 9th inning lead with 2 outs on a boot by a sure handed second baseman? That's putting pressure on him, when he's been making sportscenter top 10 esque plays all night, but boots a fairly routine one? NO. Errors play a part in any game, but relying on another team to make them in order for you to win is a ridiculous statement. You said it, not me. All I originally said was, no way in hell you pitch to Mahtook. Coach says he told pitch to pitch around him. Pitch doesnt and grooves one. Either way, communication wise or execution wise, it falls on the H. Coach. I'm not saying luck played a part in every one of our wins, but it sure as hell played a part in us making the SEC and eventually NCAA tourneys. Once again, my original point that has since been twisted into what you have made it today.
This went from me saying Cohen makes bonehead decisions in critical situations and we made tourney with some luck, to you telling me I know not what I speak of and talking as if all I've ever played was RBI baseball on Nintendo.
I knew you would chime in with the peanut gallery segment, which is the only reason I re-posted about relying on other teams to make errors is a key to winning. Great teams do not rely on other teams to make errors. Errors are more of a key to a team losing, than a team depending on them to win. You said good teams find a way to win and that sometimes depends on other teams making errors. If you can score 17'n 10+ runs a game, the other team can play perfect most nights and you still win. If you are a good enough team, the other teams errors wouldn't matter to you. A mediocre team who should be .500 based on talent, COULD win a lot more than they should with the help of other teams, which is the point I was attempting to make. Hence my examples of the last two series of the season, the last two that were fresh on everyone's minds. I don't have the time to dissect every game of the season to provide more examples, I have a job that requires actual work.
You, my friend, are the prime example of a person who never played college, and probably high school baseball, but have talked to people and or read things about baseball and believe you know more about baseball than Sir Abner Doubleday himself. I'm waiting for your response as to him being your great great grandfather or close relative of some sort. It's ok to admit you might have mispoken on the issue, but you seem to overlook some of the deficiencies of J Cohen. He has done a lot in a few years, but I'm not crowning his *** as the savior for Mississippi State Baseball. He has made strides, but he still makes bad decisions and has players that do not execute his "Instructions" at critical moments in games.