Would love to hear it
Yes I am Big Fan-but no I am not "baseball Smart/plugged in " ,so I get lost year to year on such comparisons
Thanks in Advance
Not sure if this was mentioned or if I just missed it, but DeCaro has four pitches he can throw for strikes that he's confident throwing in any count. That is rare in college. He reminds me of Zac Gallen (not now but when Zac was at UNC). Zac's fastball was 92-93 (IIRC), so he had to use all of his pitches. Guys with elite fastballs in college usually only have one other pitch they throw. Jason has four.
Several have alluded to Knapp's ability to reach back and hit 97 (like Lynch), but Jake's ability to be in the zone while locating his pitches set him apart...he threw a ton of strikes. And being able to spot that fastball made it more elite. It could be up and in when it needed to be, or low and away, or above the bat, or at the bottom of the zone. He was great at that.
I think the biggest issue I perceive with DeCaro (Lynch and Boaz, as well) is that he tries to nibble too much sometimes. This leads to more balls if you're just off, which runs the pitch count up. JD and Lynch did a good job in the GT series 'commanding the zone,' which to me means they didn't nibble too much but threw strikes that were difficult to barrel up. Hitting locations rather than spots.
Even against ECU yesterday, he wasn't bad. Their first four hits were not hit very hard. It looks bad because he gave up 4 hits and 2 runs in the first. On a different day, though, those could have easily been ground ball outs & you're out of the 1st with 0 runs given up. That's why Forbes said what he did postgame.
Full circle...moving forward, we need to channel that Knapp mentality. You can't afford to walk guys, because we'll face some really good offenses. And teams will kill you with small ball in Omaha if you put guys on base.