Using Adaptability to Predict
Once you’ve seen enough pitches, you can predict certain tendencies and MLB The Show 25 Stubs pre-adjust your timing.
Example:
Opponent always throws a changeup after a high fastball → sit slower timing after you see the heater.
Opponent uses inside fastballs when ahead 0–2 → pre-load earlier in those counts.
This isn’t guessing — it’s anticipatory adaptation based on observed patterns.
10. Common Timing and Adaptability Mistakes
Locking into One Timing: Works vs. CPUs, fails badly vs. humans.
Overcompensating: Swinging way too early/late when trying to adjust.
Not Practicing Offspeed: If you only train against fastballs, real games will expose you.
Ignoring Location: Timing isn’t just about speed — inside/outside makes a huge difference.
Playing Tilted: Frustration tightens muscles and slows reaction time, making adjustments harder.
11. Integrating Timing and Adaptability
At the plate, here’s the sequence elite players run through in milliseconds:
Baseline Load: Default fastball-ready timing.
Early Read: Out of the hand, judge potential speed and location.
Micro-Adjust: Slightly earlier or later load depending on cheap MLB Stubs read.
Commit or Check: Swing if read is confirmed; hold if not.
eld.gg MLB The Show 25 Stubs: Swinging way too early/late
Moderators: Growler, jif, SLYDIT, Born_disturbed
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 26 guests