Originally published March 30, 2013 at 8:03 PM | Page modified March 30, 2013 at 10:29 PM

Every hitter at Safeco Field has a sob story (or 10) the blast he was sure was going out until it died in the marine layer.

Well, there's a flip side to that standard tale of woe, of course. For every hitter sulking in the agony of a tater lost, there has been a pitcher reveling in the ecstasy of an ERA preserved.

"If everyone looked back," said right-hander Blake Beavan, "you can think of certain pitches; you're like, 'I don't know if that's going to stay in ... oh, thank you.' That big, deep breath you let out."

Since the Mariners announced Oct. 2 they are moving in the fences for the 2013 season, much of the focus has been on the impact the change will have on hitters, who have exhaled in unison. But the other part of this equation is whether it will backfire by harming Mariners pitchers more than it helps their hitters.

The consensus in the organization is that the tradeoff will be worth it, an opinion strongly held by the Mariners' ace, Felix Hernandez. He gave general manager Jack Zduriencik his blessing for the move last season, and then proved his lack of concern by signing a seven-year contract extension over the offseason.

"I'm not worried at all," Hernandez said. "When we play on the road and play in short ballparks, we've pitched pretty good. I'm not worried about that. We need to keep the ball down and make good pitches."

Pitching coach Carl Willis, in fact, plans to preach to his staff to keep their same priorities.

"I don't think anything changes," he said. "You can't go out and necessarily pitch to the ballpark. We're going to continue to be aggressive early in counts, try to establish pitchers' counts, as opposed to hitters' counts. ... I don't think from our pitchers' standpoint it's going to be that much different."

But there's no doubt Mariners pitchers have thrived from playing half their games in Safeco. In all 13 full seasons since the ballpark opened, Seattle has had a lower earned-run average at home than on the road. The biggest discrepancy of all came in 2012, when Mariners pitchers put up a 2.96 ERA at home (second lowest in the American League) compared to 4.59 on the road (ninth in the AL). The difference of more than a run and a half a game (1.63) surpassed the 1.36 differential in 2000, the first full season of the ballpark.

Continued here:
Mariners' pitching strategy won't change with fences moved in at Safeco Field

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March 31, 2013 at 6:56 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Fences