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雅文 孔
雅文 孔

eld.gg MLB The Show 25 Stubs: Common Pitfalls

Example of Sequence Exploitation in MLB The Show 25 Stubs Action

Let’s walk through a realistic Ranked Seasons at-bat.


Innings 1–3 Observations:


Every time the opponent throws a sinker inside, they follow with a slider away.


In two-strike counts, they never throw back-to-back fastballs.


4th Inning, My AB:


Count: 1–0.


Pitcher throws sinker inside — I don’t swing.


I know the slider away is next.


PCI is set outer half, timing slightly delayed.


Slider comes exactly where expected.


Result: Double to the gap.


This wasn’t luck — it was reading and punishing a sequence pattern.


Advanced Sequence Reading: Layering Categories

The most dangerous hitters combine sequence patterns with pitch type and location tendencies.


Example of a full-layer read:


Type: 70% sliders in two-strike counts.


Location: Sliders almost always low and away.


Sequence: Sliders follow high fastballs 80% of the time.


Now you’re not just predicting the second pitch — you’re predicting exactly what and where it will be.


Common Pitfalls When Reading Sequences

Pattern Paranoia

Sometimes there’s no real pattern — don’t overthink it and paralyze your swing.


Static Thinking

Good opponents adjust mid-game. Just because a sequence worked in the 2nd inning doesn’t mean it will in the 6th.


Forgetting Context

Runners on base, inning, and score all influence pitch calling. A pattern in a bases-empty situation might vanish with MLB The Show 25 Stubs for sale a runner on third.

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