Font Size
15px

Lin Guanglai and Sanchez anticipated ibin's strong contact skills, but his hitting power was slightly below average in the Major League. After a brief exchange, Lin Guanglai suppressed ibin's grounder towards first and second base with a cutter pitch, easily eliminating him with just one ball.

Then, it was Trout again. As the divine trout stepped into the batter's box for the second ti, the Angel fans, who had been disinterested due to the ho team's significant disadvantage, once again erupted in cheers for their superstar.

Losing seed inevitable, so the only hope left for Angel fans in this ga was to see Trout hit a hor - judging by their previous match-up, it wasn't an impossible feat.

During their first confrontation, Lin Guanglai chose to attack the upper edge of Trout's strike zone with both balls. This strategy was derived from Yankees' data analysis, which showed that:

For Trout, the center and low positions of the strike zone, from area 4 to area 9 of the nine zones, are all his hitting sweet spots; when he's in good form, he hits almost everything accurately. The high ball is relatively his weakness, which Trout admitted in previous years.

However, based on the performance in this ga, Trout's control over high balls in the strike zone was improving, particularly when he precisely hit Lin Guanglai's first high fastball on the outer corner, indicating his exceptional form.

During halfti in the player's area, Lin Guanglai reviewed his initial confrontation with Trout. It was then he realized he overlooked an important factor that could influence the balance of the pitching and hitting duel:

This ga was Trout's first official match after a six-week hiatus due to a torn thumb ligant! In other words, the psychological impact of his recent recovery was also a point Lin Guanglai could exploit.

For a right-handed hitter like Trout, who focuses on long hits, the ligant tear would impair his ability to precisely control the bat, affecting his ability to stabilize the bat head—this directly impacts his control over lower positions in the strike zone!

Lin Guanglai and the Yankees team had been wary of Trout's powerful low ball hitting ability but subconsciously ignored his recent recovery: Indeed, the Angel's dical team would ensure Trout's complete recovery before reinstating him. However, often the physical recovery precedes the psychological healing, which takes longer.

After planning his strategy, Lin Guanglai took a deep breath, nodded to Gary Sanchez in the catcher's seat, and imdiately threw the baseball towards ho plate where Trout stood!

88 miles per hour, a fast forkball, entry point in the middle of the lower edge of Trout's strike zone. Trout did not respond directly, and the chief umpire didn't signal anything either.

Ball, count 1 ball, 0 strikes.

Receiving the returned ball again, Lin Guanglai rubbed the ball's surface several tis with his palm, adjusted, and quickly threw the ball again—this ti, a 100 miles per hour fastball aid at Trout's strike zone inner corner.

"Swing and miss!" The comntator's voice erupted loudly, and the stands echoed with a loud gasp—the fastball seed to fly into the strike zone at an eye-blurring speed, past Paul Skins seated directly behind ho plate, Trout hit nothing but air.

Count, 1 ball, 1 strike.

The third ball, Lin Guanglai chose to use a cutter to attack the outer low position against Trout, but the baseball didn't fall into the strike zone after lateral movent. This kind of ball naturally couldn't fool Trout; he still didn't swing.

Ball, count 2 balls, 1 strike.

Seeing Lin Guanglai consistently working on his low position in the strike zone, as the league's top player Trout naturally knew what his opponent was thinking; standing outside the batter's box, he kept chewing gum and swung his bat incessantly—if Lin Guanglai dared to target the sa area, Trout would surely make him regret!

The fourth ball soon ca, but its location choice surprised everyone: leading the count against the league's best batter, Lin Guanglai's fourth ball unexpectedly attacked the red center of Trout's strike zone!

"A 102 miles per hour super-fastball, Trout…" Without blinking, the comntator fixated on the screen in front of him, "Swing and miss!!!" In the next mont, the trendous sound exploded among the thousands of hos watching the broadcast.

Assessing the two strikes Lin Guanglai secured, both were sheer power confrontations. Joe Girardi was right, even the history's most proficient hitters have a career batting average slightly over .300; even Trout, as the current number one and a contender for the best in history, is not an invincible target!

Defeating Trout with two consecutive fastballs, Lin Guanglai felt his adrenaline surging, the fla in his heart blazing wildly—he decided to throw again, and once again, it was a fastball!!!

The baseball speed remained swift, spinning intensely, even exceeding the previous two throws;

Tracking the ball's trajectory, a top hitter like Trout would never choose complacency, his previously gathered strength poured into the pitch-black bat as his arm swung, unstoppably, towards the oncoming ball—

"Mike Trout… Swing and miss! In a 2 balls, 2 strikes situation, Lin suddenly threw a high fastball in the strike zone, reaching 101 miles per hour, unexpectedly catching Trout off-guard after a prolonged low stance confusion—striking out, batter out!"

"Oh-oh-oh-oh-oh-oh—!!!"

"Rumble-rumble-rumble-rumble-rumble—!!!"

Almost simultaneously with the outco, cheers and warm applause erupted at Angel Stadium, even Angel fans supporting the ho team joined in—for exciting confrontations between elite players transcend stances and identities, uniting everyone on the sa front.

On the pitcher's mound, Lin Guanglai appeared exceptionally excited, raising his fist and shouting, evidently completely imrsed in the flow; from the batter's box, Trout only glanced at the pitcher's mound with his deep eyes, then turned to walk back to the player's area.

After dealing with the greatest threat, Trout, Lin Guanglai thoroughly entered his zone, and the remaining Angel hitters couldn't even face him for one round, falling out one after another; anwhile, Yankees' batting line seed inspired by their pitcher's excellent form, continuing to expand the score gap.

Such one-sided slaughter was indeed sowhat brutal for many Angel fans present, so before the sixth inning ended and the final phase began, Angel Stadium already saw nurous ho fans start to leave—not realizing they were about to miss sothing spectacular.

From the seats behind ho plate, Paul Skins intensely stared at Lin Guanglai still pitching on the field; then he glanced at the outfield's electronic scoreboard, discovering sothing maddening:

Until now, the number of hits by the Angels and the number of walks by Lin Guanglai remained—

Zero.

You are reading Baseball: A Two-Way Player Chapter 685 27: Fishing for Hits (Part 2) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.