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As late as the 1990s, sabermetrics-savvy sports fans are making incredible discoveries about the game. One of these fans, a man named Voros McCracken, publishes an article in which he argues, in the face of a hundred years of baseball consensus, that there’s no such thing as a pitcher who’s especially good at preventing hits when he pitches into the field of play (i.e, out of the strike zone, over the plate). For decades, coaches and fans believed that a good pitcher was one who could pitch over the plate so quickly and accurately that hitters would be unable to…