Pat Murphy has a way of turning a routine media session into a long, winding conversation, and when the Brewers manager decides he wants to keep talking baseball, he’ll do it on his own terms.
That happened one day in April, when Murphy was asked about Joey Ortiz’s recent at-bats and chose to walk the writers and broadcasters in his office through the way he grades hitters from the dugout.
“I'll let you in on this,” Murphy said, gesturing to one of the many papers strewn across his desk.
What looked like a basic scorecard is really Murphy’s shorthand system for judging each Brewers at-bat as it happens. He marks the sheet with symbols that tell him how he felt about the plate appearance.
“I make notations on the type of at-bat it is,” he said. “If it's a dot, that means solid at-bat.
If it's a plus, that means really good. If it's a minus, that means ******.
If it's an equal sign, that means, 'Meh.'”
Murphy’s method is built around process, not just the final result. In that sense, it lines up with the way modern baseball tries to measure hitters: less obsession with whether a ball found grass, more attention to whether the swing decision and contact quality were right.
He said he’ll even factor in the shape of the at-bat itself.
“If it's an 11-pitch strikeout, I might give them an equal sign. Good battle,” Murphy said.
“But the key is to not have too many minuses. That's what gets guys in trouble, the minus, minus, minus.
Poor at-bats, at-bats that hurt us.”
The parallels to Statcast are obvious, even if Murphy isn’t sitting around reading Baseball Savant pages. He doesn’t need the jargon, in his view, because his eyes are already telling him what the data would.
“Hard contacts are usually a plus,” Murphy said. “If it's straight down or straight up, I can't give you a plus. I can give you a dot, not a plus.”
He also keeps his own version of a barrel on the card, even if he’s not using the official Statcast definition of a ball hit at least 98 mph within a certain launch angle range.
“If you get one good and it goes on that perfect trajectory… I'll give you a plus with a circle,” Murphy said.
Murphy was quick to note that the system is not meant to be a scientific model.
“It's not scientific,” Murphy said with a laugh. “It's really for me to remember without putting the actual scoring down there.”
Still, the card says plenty about how he sees the game. Murphy may come from an old-school baseball background, but his way of evaluating hitters fits neatly alongside an analytical front office. The language is different, but the priorities often match: good contact, good decisions, fewer empty trips.
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