A reporter asked Hinch about Crawford’s hit, and Hinch replied he’s rather him swing to beat the shift than hit one out. I understand the general purpose of the shift: we are going to take away your power/pull side so go the other way if you think you can.
I get it, but I think there should be situational defense too. Crawford’s AB could not tie the game; a solo HR would still have us in front 3-2. What would tie the game is a Crawford shift-beating single and then a HR. Seems to me keeping him off base was a big deal in that situation. Why not play him straight up with a 2-run lead, especially if the plan was to pitch him away?