That would be me. Maybe others too, I don't know. Maybe this is pointless since you said "period," but I'll give it a shot. I said anti-clutch was easier to swallow than clutch, because hitting isn't a marathon. It's a maximum effort and concentration proposition every time. I think it's more likely that a player could be affected negatively by the biggest situation he's ever been in, than that igniting some skill that they can't tap into otherwise. Also, what's a nerve-wracking or "clutch" situation to a player might not be exactly be high leverage situations, or late and close or whatever. As players move up through the levels, what makes an at-bat pressure packed? The fact that they are fighting for their career, promotions, a starting job with every plate appearance or that the Missoula Osprey is down by one run during some double-header in July? A player's entire pre-arb experience should be "clutch." If someone is saying that a major leaguer can only fully concentrate and give maximum effort during an at-bat that's late in the year, maybe has playoff implications, or in the postseason, then I say that's preposterous. If they are saying that they don't fully concentrate all of the time, then that's not what clutch is. That's just a player that must be supremely talented to hold down a job in the bigs with those kind of lapses. And the more we whittle it down to keep the romance alive, the more useless the sample sizes. For the most part, I think that players that are affected by these types of things are weeded out long before the show, so I doubt there is much of it. I don't doubt that there is such a thing as situational hitters, or hitters better suited for certain situations, so maybe some of the clutch debate is semantics. PH and abuck said it pretty well, I think.