Throughout the season, Roy Halladay has been vulnerable in the first inning. In fact, the first hitters he has faced in games this year are batting well over .300 off him. That's amazing (actually puzzling) since batters as a whole are only batting .239.
After giving up the three spot in the first inning and a leadoff hit in the second, Halladay retired 21 straight batters. In order to do that, he had to do the following:
- He bared down and was determined to not allow a bad start to carry on throughout the game.
- He made adjustments immediately.
- He kept his confidence up during the adversity and knew that he would be fine.
- He trusted his stuff and knew that over time, it would lead him towards success.
- He kept his poise.
- He focused all his attention to holding the Cardinals to those three runs so that his offense had plenty of time to warm up and get back in the game (and boy did they ever!).
- He didn't dwell on what already occurred.
- He didn't set out to throw 100+ pitches. He set out to throw one pitch, with full attention, 105 times.
All great stuff that any pitcher can learn from.