Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
Collapse
Recommended Videos
Collapse
X
-
-
Comment
-
“Nobody in the history of the game tried what I just tried. We’re talking about on the biggest stage, in New York, playing out of position and asked to hit fourth for the New York Yankees. I mean, that’s never been done.” - Sheffield on SheffieldComment
-
Re: Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
Yeah, your probably right, especially this time of year. In all seriousness, I really do think somethings wrong with him. The team is trimming payroll in an attemp to add some big names. Usually they just add a bunch of big names and sort out the mess afterwards. They actually resemble a team being run by a competent front office this offseason.Comment
-
Re: Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
Biggest reason for blowing this money: getting a 26 year old MLB ready (we think) pitcher who throws 91-96 with late movement on his fastball plus very effective second and third pitches for ONLY money.Comment
-
Member of the Official OS Bills Backers Club
"Baseball is the most important thing that doesn't matter at all" - Robert B. ParkerComment
-
Re: Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
I wish the Cubs would have won the bidding. Money is money. They have alot of it, and it doesn't count against the cap. Just shows willingness to want to win. It was worth the gamble for Boston regardless of what happens.Comment
-
Re: Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
Description of the pitch:
"...the short version is that instead of using the linear kinetic chain that’s the subject of American research, the Japanese attempt to coordinate two circular motions...the ball comes at the hitter looking like a hanging curve and then takes a hard, flat turn away from a right-handed batter."
and here's a link with a video of the pitch
That doesn't sound or look like a slow cut fastball to me.Member of the Official OS Bills Backers Club
"Baseball is the most important thing that doesn't matter at all" - Robert B. ParkerComment
-
Re: Prized pitcher Matsuzaka given OK to pitch in MLB
Here's info to refresh our memories. It's from a thread that AF did
Description of the pitch:
"...the short version is that instead of using the linear kinetic chain that’s the subject of American research, the Japanese attempt to coordinate two circular motions...the ball comes at the hitter looking like a hanging curve and then takes a hard, flat turn away from a right-handed batter."
and here's a link with a video of the pitch
That doesn't sound or look like a slow cut fastball to me.
The video of the high school kid is too far away to really see much, but it looked like a big curveball to me.Comment
Comment