So, is this to say that these guys NEVER found success in those cities? I mean, Contreras didn't pitch to what he is capable of... but he also had a few good games if I remember. If pressure in front of a certain stadium or within the bounds of a particularly "difficult" city is the deciding factor for certain players, then wouldn't it follow that those players NEVER found success in those cities? Anything else would be in direct contradiction.
'
I don't think it was the long-term pressure on Renteria that made him suck. He sucked because he was heavy and slow and injured. He showed signs, in Fenway, of being the offensively strong SS that he had been his entire career and to which he has become again of late. He just didn't do it very often. Is there any proof that he tended to get it done when the media was particularly fervant that day (i.e., on days when the Media had their Weaties, Renteria sucks)? I don't think so. He just trended toward the lower end of his projections over a 162 game season and that was enough for the Sox to dump him.
Jeff Weaver? He is currently sucking in the not-so-media-crazy Seattle. Perhaps he just sucks. :dunno:
Overall I'm just a much bigger fan of seeing things as trends and statistically normal rather than blaming things on 'fan pressure' or such things. Like ORS said, at times in particular games it can be difficult to be a player, but I think it is just as common for a player to be tempted to "over think" situations where the entire crowd is standing, as it is for a player to be not paying attention when playing a Tuesday afternoon game in KC in front of 3,300 fans. It goes both ways.
Plus, I think that in order for a hitter to hit a pitch in .4 seconds they have to clear pretty much everything else out of their heads. It is a reaction. Pitching, on the other hand, is a full body motion more like a gymnastics routine. There is room there for mental mistakes, not so much for a hitter who has trained himself to hit outside pitches the other way, take anything that starts above the eyes, not swing at pitches with the dot in the middle, and rip on fastballs inside. If there is a city problem I would say that it is with pitching, as pitchers regularly get booed while standing on the mound. Hitters tend to get booed while they are walking back to the safety of a dugout. If fielders make a lot of errors at home (like Renteria) then they have to face the full force of the crowd, but other than that I think hitters are much more spared from--and therefore less conscious of--the boo birds. Just my opinion...