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Catchers virtually always throw with their right hand.
Since most hitters are right-handed and thus stand on the left side of
the plate, a catcher who throws left-handed would often have to avoid
these right-handed hitters for most of his throws from behind the plate.
Thus players who throw left-handed rarely play catcher. Lefty catchers
have only caught 11 big-league games since 1902 and Jack Clements, who
played for seventeen years at the end of the 19th century, is the only
man in the history of baseball to play more than three hundred games as
a left-handed catcher. However, some observers, including the
famed statistician Bill James, have suggested that the real reason that
there are no left-handed catchers is because lefties with a strong
throwing arm are almost always turned into pitchers at an early age.
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