I remember Ichiro mentioning in his retirement speech, how baseball is becoming a braindead sport. While he avoided clarifying exactly what the "trend" was, he lamented on how "baseball used to require intelligence and tenacity", and "hoped Japanese baseball didn't follow this American trend", and "stayed the intelligent, clever game it always was." Fast forward to today, and we now know that what he meant was tipping pitches using cameras, hitting trash cans - braindead hitting, reacting to a coach or buzzer, rather than coercing pitchers to throw a certain pitch. On watching this video, I think the velocity surpassing most hitter's reaction times may be forcing this trend of using technology to relay incoming pitches to hitters.
this is very high quality production. you’d expect a guy with a platform like 50x larger to have this good of a video, keep it up i believe you’ll go far
1) He threw low 90s and got a lot of K’s 2) Using him as an example is like telling someone that Michael Jordan got cut from His basketball team 3) Maddux*
Maddux wasn't nearly as much of a soft tosser as people think. Still a control freak, but accurate radar guns weren't available when he was around, and I imagine he was topping out at 93-94 at his peak, which back then was harder than it is now. It was just never his calling card, which is why he was still so good. There's not many guys that can survive steep velo drops, especially nowadays and how hitters are programmed. Greg Maddux type pitchers just aren't all that common. Very few like him before or after him. Had 6-7 pitches, could throw the ball where he wanted, and make the ball do what he wanted. Really hard to ask pitchers to be like that. If it was easier I guarantee there'd be less of those stock fastball/slider guys that sit 95 and a lot more command artists. So Maddux was really a unicorn more than anything
I don't think velo itself is the thing that get pitcher injured but the amount of effort put into the pitch (example Tim Lincecum trying his hardest to throw 97-98 got him injured but then there's Blake Treinen who throws a sinker at 98 with little effort and he has been healthy)
its a mixture of biology, god given strength and durability, diet, form, etc. Who knows who can throw a fast or high curving pitch for long periods at the major league level, until they do it. Nobody. Bigger bones usually seem to help, as does a higher nitrogen based muscle content, as Midwestern and Texan pitchers have typically displayed at higher levels on average
Its not just velocity, its the insane spin rates pitchers are getting today. The movement on these pitches today is sickening. If a pitcher is not getting good spin rate today they are going to get absolutely shelled.
If a pitcher doesn’t have good spin rate they won’t make it past high-A. The game has such a newfound and deep understanding of how to maximize spin rates, and changes to improve skill
I love seeing all of the "starting throwers" on my team throwing as hard as they can to try and strike everyone out, and not being able to make it past 5 innings because they've already thrown 100 pitches.
I think limiting the number of pitchers on a roster would help. With less bullpen to fall back on, pitchers will be forced to lower their intensity and pitch at lower speeds for longer rather than giving maximum effort on every pitch. Lower velocity would also put an even heavier emphasis on location and sequencing making pitching more skillful. On another note, I'm interested to hear feedback from other baseball fans about deadening the ball a bit. Personally, I find balls in play to be much more entertaining than HRs and SOs. Obviously a HR has the wow factor but it's a break in tension rather than building upon it like a base hit does. The most fun innings aren't solo homers but several hits strung together by a lineup, great plays by the defense, quick and clever base running, things that build tension. I think lowering velo and deadening the ball would reserve HRs for true power hitters again and encourage a more contact oriented approach for those who aren't as strong. This would increase hits, balls in play, lower SOs, make HRs more rare and therefore special thereby bringing more fun to baseball. Thoughts?
No, it would just increase use of “taxi squads”. Limiting pitchers is one of the worst ideas I’ve heard. Players will go all out to try and make the most money they can, because the results is what influences their pay.
@@pohorex6834 The only thing that matters is the number of pitchers available, regardless of what organizational term they fall under. If the number of pitchers is lower, the pitchers will pitch with lower intensity. Also you're implying that the "taxi squad" rules couldn't be reworked. There's no reason to assume that a theoretical change couldn't work as a result of being in conflict with existing rules because those can be changed too.
Additionally, regarding velocity, it is partly a matter of physics. Modern pitching mechanics are similar to a trebuchet, the longer the arm and motion the higher velocity is possible. This is also why larger pitchers seem to able throw hard easier.
@@CheeseDizzle The problem with moving the mound further back is it that while it gives the hitters more time to react, it won't change how much effort the pitchers use when throwing and it will also give breaking pitches more time to move. So while the hitters gain reaction time, the pitches have more movement. I'm not sure if that would increase or decrease offense but it definitely wouldn't reduce stress on pitchers' arms.
Most pitchers may have more sound mechanics but this is essentially what Tim Lincecum did, and for a while he was the best pitcher in baseball...until his arm absolutely fell apart after only 4 full seasons. In physics force is force. If your generating 100 mph velocity, the force neccesary to get there is in your arm no matter how 'smooth' the mechanics are the amount of torque your putting on your arm never really changes for each 100 mph pitch. You can't do that that many times and expect your arm to stay intact. Nolan Ryan is an outlier that may as well gotten lucky he didn't obliterate his arm.
Ryan was definitely a freak in the best way lol. He threw consistently hard for 26 years, but you can't count on guys having the luck that Nolan had in his natural durability.
Force is force, but the entire motion is just the use of muscles and tendons. If everything recovers properly, there isn’t an issue. The issue is recovery. We need to revolutionize the way we care for players. We know more and more than ever, and we actually have the technology to evaluate throwing readiness
Nolan Ryan actually had a partial tear of his UCL in September of 1988. He shut it down until spring training when the ligament was scarred over and protected it. He pitched with that tear for the rest of his career.
I do agree mostly, but Lincecum's main downfall was his degenerative hips. With his mechanics, while they were a work of art and generated so much torque for a guy his size, he leaned a lot on generating power from his hips. You're still right though. Worked way to much early and didn't last. Much like King Felix. His 2 seam/4 seam velo dropped 7 mph from his first CY year to his last year in the bigs. Since he was tiny for a power pitcher I assume it came more from his lower half, also don't remember any arm injuries from him. Could've been a combo of the two who knows
Mark Buehrle is my favorite pitcher ever because he played fast and he didn’t pitch hard. 88mph average fastball, never injured. You knew he’d play every 5 games. Managed to accumulate 60 war, 5 all stars, 5 gold gloves, a World Series, perfect game, and no hitter. Average of 221IP per season. Maybe the most consistent performer ever.
You definitely should’ve mentioned the foreign substance problem as it is definitely much more impactful or the K percentage increasing then just the velocity increase
I watched Max Scherzer as a Nats fan - he was an Iron Man and threw a lot of innings. His fastball, that he throws the majority of the time, has had a velocity sitting around 94MPH his entire career. He came into the All Star game one year and threw one for 100MPH - just to remind everyone that he *could* be throwing that fast. Having a few guys (even non-elite) who eat up innings used to be far more valuable, even if it meant an extra run or two, and I think the approach can still work. Too many financial disasters...nobody wants to tune in to games with a bunch of no-name pitchers because everyone is on the IL.
Fantastic work so far with this channel. I don’t hand out compliments when they aren’t deserved. Don’t stop pumping these videos out. Your channel will blow up before long.
Well, I remember when pitchers like Catfish Hunter just changed speeds and painted the corners with an 88 mph fastball, and managed to throw a perfect game. Gregg Maddox was pretty successful, not sure if he ever threw a fastball in the 90's.
@@averyfabian9936 True, his fastball touched 93 mph in his early years, but his velocity steadily declined throughout his career, and was never his principal focus as a pitcher. By the end of his career, his fastball averaged less than 86 mph. His four seam fastball was usually around 88 MPH.
@@hvymettle that's definitely true that he was that type of pitcher when he was older, but if he was like that at the beginning of his career, he would probably have never made it to the mlb
@breadandcircuses8127 easy. They show higher readings than what the pitch actually is. They measure pitchers as soon as the ball is released as opposed to measuring it as it crosses the plate - as in what the hitter actually sees the pitch as. For decades they measured velocity this way as it made more sense. Now they do it differently ever since velocity really became a selling point. Technically this isn’t a “lie” but it’s a sneaky way of fudging the numbers to sell the product.
While batting averages have gone down I was looking at year over year league wide OPS numbers. The seem to be highest during the steroid era of the 90’s through early 2000’s. However I then compared the last 10 years to years pre-1990 and they are noticeably higher now than they were before the steroid era. The game is seeing more offensive production now than it has for the majority of its history. So hitters do seem to be adjusting. They’re just taking a different approach. I do think MLB balls are definitely juiced today compared to years past as well. Various experiments have shown significantly higher exit velocities on MLB balls vs other baseballs. But you’d really have to get your hands on some much older MLB balls to make the comparison to the current ones. And even then after years of sitting and degrading you couldn’t properly compare the old balls to newly manufactured balls.
This is why I find it increasingly hard to watch games. Games have become two dimensional with focus on strikeouts and home runs. The fact that players like Kyle Schawarber and Joey Gallo can find themselves in the starting lineup of a major league team is a serious indictment of how messed up the game has become.
It’ll be interesting to see what starts happening to pitcher contracts. If this trend continues, teams may be less likely to dish out massive contracts for pitchers because the injury risk is going to be so much higher.
@@jellyfishgamestudios”much higher spin rates” lol. Compared to what?? They didn’t start measuring this nerdy stuff until very recently. God this generation is so full of 💩.
I can see people touching 113, but never sitting. I think the highest velo someone will sit will be around 106-107. We have Joyce and Duran throwing consistently at the low 100s, Joyce sits 101-102, Duran touching 104 a lot. These 9th graders who throw 90 nowadays will be this next generation.
The person who throws 110 at some point will probably break their arm doing it, unless it’s reinforced with titanium which would decrease the mechanical fluidity of muscles joints and ligaments, in my opinion
Throwing 113mph would require ~16% more kinetic energy from the pitchers arm compared to throwing 105mph. Kinetic energy is effected by velocity^2 so every extra mph takes an exponentially greater amount of energy through the pitchers arm to make it happen. It’s probably never going to happen.
Low 90mph will still be effective with location, movement and velocity changes. A 2+4 seam, cutter, changeup, and curve ranging between 75-95. And i think the injury problem has more to do with the emphasis on the various sliders. The velocity pushing does not help though.
Naw sliders are actually not that bad for your arm when thrown properly. The big issue is that kids throw harder younger. You have some guys who have been able to touch 99+ well before they even hit a minor league affiliate. And since velo seems to be the single most important thing in a scouts eye, they don’t care if you will get hurt, they will use you until the wheels fall off. And that’s the sad reality of baseball now.
@@rowdyghost4713 It seems that in High School the under 18--19 kids are hitting this level of speed going 99 mph + and yes the teams will just use you becuse of all the talent out there that this is why players now have to retire as pitchers before age 25 in MLB The problem is the, super high over 100 mph Fastball, then Fastball Slider or Curve Fastball being pushed as the only other 2 pitches used in Baseball currently besides the over 100 mph Fastball. This is why an amazing left hand pitcher I graduated with never made it out of the lower ranks of the Minors in my town Pierre (Pier) South Dakota who graduated in 2007 with me. He was an 80--85 mph hitter but had this Curveball Slider that few could hit and was rarely injured. The reason he did not get further into the Minor leagues was the 2010 was the start of the Speed Pitching only those above 90 mph for every type of pitch that has only increased year after year so that now other pitches like a Curveball or Slider must be pitched at 95+ mph or about 90--95% of a Max Fastball.
Having a diverse arsenal is obviously an effective way to attack hitters. But the rest of your comment is just wrong. Breaking pitches (curveballs, sliders, sweepers, etc) put less stress on the arm than fastballs when thrown correctly. As for throwing a lot at a young age, you need to throw to build arm strength and learn efficient movement patterns. I do agree 11-14 year old kids shouldn’t be throwing hundreds of pitches in a tournament. But kids should be throwing at varying intensities throughout a week of training
I'd add that when Joey Gallo doesn't hit a homerun he also walks quite a lot. Walk rate and a batters plate discipline ( ability recognize strikes from balls,) has become more important too. The poster boy for that trend is Juan Soto who literally shuffles and stares down the pitcher when he takes a difficult pitch to not swing at. Soto's antics aside, hitters being more selective also isn't going to be as exciting, at least for the casual fan.
Andrez munoz is a perfect example of how having the ability to throw fast isnt the most affective. He has an unbelievable fast ball that can hit 103, but he throws his slider 70 percent of the time because its abudently more effective.
What's up Average Baseball? This is good content. Question: Could the high injury rate among pitchers have anything to do with the fact that the pitch-clock removes those extra 10 or seconds of rest that went into the game prior to 2023?
1:10 - idk but I feel like BA is the wrong stat to use here bc it doesn’t include walks… how much of that is from faster pitches being harder to locate in the strike zone?
Here's a weird idea, anything past 99.9 is a ball but make the zone bigger, not like anything crazy huge but just enough to offset the advantage it gives to hitters
I think they need to move the mound back at least 1.5 ft. to 64 ft. and lower it a few inches (probably like 1 to 2 inches). Modern pitching mechanics are similar to a trebuchet, the longer the arm and motion the higher velocity is possible. This is also why larger pitchers seem to able throw hard easier.
Yea I pitched from little league to highschool and at age 13 I played travel baseball for coaches that played pro or college. Now I never threw as hard as these guys throw in today's game but that tells me with all these injuries is that they are not putting ice on their arms after they throw say 7 innings. Because pitchers that throw breaking balls such as curve balls can put a lot of strain on your arm as well. I was always told that it doesn't matter how hard you throw if you can't throw it over the plate. There are pitchers who do side sessions or bullpen sessions before it is their time to pitch again especially starting pitchers. But another aspect can make you throw harder is by throwing long toss because it builds up your arm strength and lifting weights or by throwing a heavier ball before they begin their warmups in the bullpen. But no it's not hurting baseball whatsoever it just sounds like somebody wants to make a big deal out of nothing that doesn't understand the game of baseball
here’s what I think the MLB should do, make a limit of a pitch at 97 or smth and if someone goes above it will be a ball, if its already a ball then it counts as two
I actually think this is the true root cause behind the baseball is boring attitudes that some people have. While it doesn’t bother me, I can see why some people would be less interested in seeing the three true outcomes. IMO, they should try deadening the ball and/or lowering the seems to make it easier to make contact but harder to hit it out. Maybe they could even try raising the mound again. They did try moving the mound back, but that was a disaster because the breaking pitches moved too much. Love or hate the pitch clock, I think it won’t really matter in the long run if the contact rates don’t improve. It’s kind of strange to see players get to be too good at a sport to the point where it’s less entertaining.
Fast pitching has always effected pitchers. Lot of promising Pitchers end up blowing their arms completely out. There is a limit to what the human arm can take being used that way.
@breadandcircuses8127 Because our muscles are like tight fleshy fibers that are connected by other soft tissue. When you move an arm it's just like moving a machine, Machines break down when they are worn down. So can peoples arms.
@breadandcircuses8127 no worries friend... think of a pitchers arm like one of those Trebuchet (A fancier catapult) look how they move and compare it to a pitchers throw and you'll see what I mean. All that machinery is producing so much force things snap and break.
You say that watching pitchers hit 100mph but do you forget how excited the whole country was when Sammy sosa and mark McGwire were chasing the home run record? Trust me people like seeing baseball be played at that high of a level, I’d bet if you started hitting the ball 700ft people would take notice
Not that we’ve witnessed the peak of pitching but I believe batting has the higher ceiling in baseball. I think the batters will catch up as the game evolves
Pitchers would do better to work on command instead of simply trying to overpower batters. There would be fewer injuries and starters could go longer than 5 or 6 innings.
Not to nitpick but the intro footage was loosely picked. Kyle Gibson ain’t touching triple digits, and Aroldis Chapman was on the Reds like 10 years ago. Great video, just something that irked me immediately haha.
If this continues, we will one day see a pitcher throwing 150 mph ... until his arm rips off his body and flies through the strike zone with his hand still clutching the baseball.
Players are a lot more replaceable now as there is not very much variation in skill sets and not as much variation in skill level which is also hurting the game
Soon the pitchers will hit so hard the helmets break and a helmet designed for fastpitch softball heavier ball impact with the cage might have to be used.
Not to pick on Chris Young, but he wasn't exactly a flamethrower when he played...so it's not surprising to hear him say that he doesn't want all of his pitchers with crazy velo, seeing how he was a 6'10" pitcher throwing 91 🤣 he might be a bit opinionated on the topic of velocity and pitching...
Many pitchers are shortening their careers because of trying to throw hard. They don't know how to pitch. Whitey Ford didn't throw hard but had a curve ball that was his out pitch.
You can't get by on junk pitching. A Charlie Hough can't survive against modern hitters. You have to have challenge pitches, and if it's not fast with enough movement, modern hitters will feed on it. You can have tricky stuff, but a heater with movement can go a long way.
Over the decades they've done nearly everything possible to make it easier on hitters. What on earth could they do at this point? 'ok it's an automatic ball if you throw a ball over 100mph'?
Well if you throw a 90 mph pitch right down the middle the ball will be smoked but if you throw a 100 mph pitch right down the middle it would be different
they should limit when you can throw over 100. maybe only if you're in 4th+ place and not dring playoffs but yes during world series. only on tuesday? no that's tacos. wild ass throw wednesday?
For those who keep saying that pitchers who stayed healthy and durable were genetic freaks or not throwing that hard, are wrong. If you looked at pitchers such as Ryan, Seaver, Rivera. Their mechanics are similar. When their front foot is on the ground, there arm is up. The mechanics of majority of the modern pitchers set them up for injury.
Rays have been doing this forever. They have all their pitchers just throw max effort 100% of the time and replace them when they get hurt. Seems kind of morally wrong almost.
Actually I find faster pitching honestly boring to the point of the pitcher and catcher playing catch with each other. Honestly I find the all the other fielders to be way too good at the point of almost nobody getting on base with a ball actually hit either caught on a high fly or grounder hits to the outfield easily scooped up and outfielders easily getting the ball to first base throwing almost as fast as a pitcher.
@@EvskiiCF thats nonsense. no one gets paid millions to play wiffleball. Wiffleball teams aren’t selling out stadiums in the 30,000 seat range nor do they employ 100s of concession workers who rely on the job to feed their family
@GoodLuckBeatz not nonsense at all. Baseball has a ton of idiotic rules already. You're just ignorant to them or you don't mind those because they've been around forever. Doesn't make then any less dumb The velocity limit would actually lead to more ticket sales because more hitting would occur and you'd keep arms healthier
Enough with all the silly pretense about PEDs. Make em legal. We deserve to see how a jacked human body (particularly the face) holds up to being hit by a 110mph pitch.
didnt watch the whole video so forgive me if this was said, but im convinced there will come a time when mlb just decides to move the mound back a few feet to compensate for increasing velo
The pitch clock is the absolute cause of this. Because pitchers have to switch their style as a result, they are going to do things to make up for the fact that the worst commissioner of a sport in history wants less time spent playing the game. Manfred’s hatred of baseball is the cause of all of this.
buddy no it isnt. this has been going on before the pitch clock. also the pitch clock doesnt cause less time spent playing the game. it causes less time wasted by pitchers and batters stalling.
No. This has been an issue even in college, and high school since at least the 2000's. Jeff Passan even wrote a book about it called "The Arm." Tommy John Surgery is routine now; even at lower levels.
I remember Ichiro mentioning in his retirement speech, how baseball is becoming a braindead sport. While he avoided clarifying exactly what the "trend" was, he lamented on how "baseball used to require intelligence and tenacity", and "hoped Japanese baseball didn't follow this American trend", and "stayed the intelligent, clever game it always was."
Fast forward to today, and we now know that what he meant was tipping pitches using cameras, hitting trash cans - braindead hitting, reacting to a coach or buzzer, rather than coercing pitchers to throw a certain pitch.
On watching this video, I think the velocity surpassing most hitter's reaction times may be forcing this trend of using technology to relay incoming pitches to hitters.
this is very high quality production. you’d expect a guy with a platform like 50x larger to have this good of a video, keep it up i believe you’ll go far
Greg Maddox immediately comes to mind. Didn’t overpower hitters but just hit his spots and kept the batters guessing.
honestly, this video makes me think he is top 10 all time.
Doing what Maddux did was harder than just throwing 99 mph. If people could be Maddux, more people would be, but they just can't.
He threw 94…
1) He threw low 90s and got a lot of K’s
2) Using him as an example is like telling someone that Michael Jordan got cut from His basketball team
3) Maddux*
Maddux wasn't nearly as much of a soft tosser as people think. Still a control freak, but accurate radar guns weren't available when he was around, and I imagine he was topping out at 93-94 at his peak, which back then was harder than it is now. It was just never his calling card, which is why he was still so good. There's not many guys that can survive steep velo drops, especially nowadays and how hitters are programmed.
Greg Maddux type pitchers just aren't all that common. Very few like him before or after him. Had 6-7 pitches, could throw the ball where he wanted, and make the ball do what he wanted. Really hard to ask pitchers to be like that. If it was easier I guarantee there'd be less of those stock fastball/slider guys that sit 95 and a lot more command artists. So Maddux was really a unicorn more than anything
give this channel 1 year, you will be at 100k!
I hope so, it’s a great channel, good content.
It does
@@mariahudson2062 No, the channel has 2.3k subscribers.
I actually agree
It just needs a name change.
I don't think velo itself is the thing that get pitcher injured but the amount of effort put into the pitch (example Tim Lincecum trying his hardest to throw 97-98 got him injured but then there's Blake Treinen who throws a sinker at 98 with little effort and he has been healthy)
Lincecum, Degenerative hip condition. Not his fault
@@Agua-hd4jh fair point he was probably not the best example I could have used
@@Agua-hd4jh caused by his thrusting windup,,,, so his point was accurate,, same as eric gagne
Different eras and completely different work loads
its a mixture of biology, god given strength and durability, diet, form, etc. Who knows who can throw a fast or high curving pitch for long periods at the major league level, until they do it. Nobody. Bigger bones usually seem to help, as does a higher nitrogen based muscle content, as Midwestern and Texan pitchers have typically displayed at higher levels on average
Its not just velocity, its the insane spin rates pitchers are getting today. The movement on these pitches today is sickening. If a pitcher is not getting good spin rate today they are going to get absolutely shelled.
If a pitcher doesn’t have good spin rate they won’t make it past high-A. The game has such a newfound and deep understanding of how to maximize spin rates, and changes to improve skill
I love seeing all of the "starting throwers" on my team throwing as hard as they can to try and strike everyone out, and not being able to make it past 5 innings because they've already thrown 100 pitches.
I think limiting the number of pitchers on a roster would help. With less bullpen to fall back on, pitchers will be forced to lower their intensity and pitch at lower speeds for longer rather than giving maximum effort on every pitch. Lower velocity would also put an even heavier emphasis on location and sequencing making pitching more skillful. On another note, I'm interested to hear feedback from other baseball fans about deadening the ball a bit. Personally, I find balls in play to be much more entertaining than HRs and SOs. Obviously a HR has the wow factor but it's a break in tension rather than building upon it like a base hit does. The most fun innings aren't solo homers but several hits strung together by a lineup, great plays by the defense, quick and clever base running, things that build tension. I think lowering velo and deadening the ball would reserve HRs for true power hitters again and encourage a more contact oriented approach for those who aren't as strong. This would increase hits, balls in play, lower SOs, make HRs more rare and therefore special thereby bringing more fun to baseball. Thoughts?
No, it would just increase use of “taxi squads”. Limiting pitchers is one of the worst ideas I’ve heard. Players will go all out to try and make the most money they can, because the results is what influences their pay.
@@pohorex6834 The only thing that matters is the number of pitchers available, regardless of what organizational term they fall under. If the number of pitchers is lower, the pitchers will pitch with lower intensity. Also you're implying that the "taxi squad" rules couldn't be reworked. There's no reason to assume that a theoretical change couldn't work as a result of being in conflict with existing rules because those can be changed too.
I think they need to move the mound back at least 1.5 ft. to 64 ft. and lower it a few inches (probably like 1 to 2 inches).
Additionally, regarding velocity, it is partly a matter of physics. Modern pitching mechanics are similar to a trebuchet, the longer the arm and motion the higher velocity is possible. This is also why larger pitchers seem to able throw hard easier.
@@CheeseDizzle The problem with moving the mound further back is it that while it gives the hitters more time to react, it won't change how much effort the pitchers use when throwing and it will also give breaking pitches more time to move. So while the hitters gain reaction time, the pitches have more movement. I'm not sure if that would increase or decrease offense but it definitely wouldn't reduce stress on pitchers' arms.
Most pitchers may have more sound mechanics but this is essentially what Tim Lincecum did, and for a while he was the best pitcher in baseball...until his arm absolutely fell apart after only 4 full seasons.
In physics force is force. If your generating 100 mph velocity, the force neccesary to get there is in your arm no matter how 'smooth' the mechanics are the amount of torque your putting on your arm never really changes for each 100 mph pitch. You can't do that that many times and expect your arm to stay intact. Nolan Ryan is an outlier that may as well gotten lucky he didn't obliterate his arm.
Ryan was definitely a freak in the best way lol. He threw consistently hard for 26 years, but you can't count on guys having the luck that Nolan had in his natural durability.
It was Tim's hips that broke down -- sapped his velo
Force is force, but the entire motion is just the use of muscles and tendons. If everything recovers properly, there isn’t an issue. The issue is recovery. We need to revolutionize the way we care for players. We know more and more than ever, and we actually have the technology to evaluate throwing readiness
Nolan Ryan actually had a partial tear of his UCL in September of 1988. He shut it down until spring training when the ligament was scarred over and protected it. He pitched with that tear for the rest of his career.
I do agree mostly, but Lincecum's main downfall was his degenerative hips. With his mechanics, while they were a work of art and generated so much torque for a guy his size, he leaned a lot on generating power from his hips.
You're still right though. Worked way to much early and didn't last. Much like King Felix. His 2 seam/4 seam velo dropped 7 mph from his first CY year to his last year in the bigs. Since he was tiny for a power pitcher I assume it came more from his lower half, also don't remember any arm injuries from him. Could've been a combo of the two who knows
Mark Buehrle is my favorite pitcher ever because he played fast and he didn’t pitch hard. 88mph average fastball, never injured. You knew he’d play every 5 games. Managed to accumulate 60 war, 5 all stars, 5 gold gloves, a World Series, perfect game, and no hitter. Average of 221IP per season. Maybe the most consistent performer ever.
You definitely should’ve mentioned the foreign substance problem as it is definitely much more impactful or the K percentage increasing then just the velocity increase
My god, you’re underrated. This quality is insane
I watched Max Scherzer as a Nats fan - he was an Iron Man and threw a lot of innings. His fastball, that he throws the majority of the time, has had a velocity sitting around 94MPH his entire career. He came into the All Star game one year and threw one for 100MPH - just to remind everyone that he *could* be throwing that fast. Having a few guys (even non-elite) who eat up innings used to be far more valuable, even if it meant an extra run or two, and I think the approach can still work. Too many financial disasters...nobody wants to tune in to games with a bunch of no-name pitchers because everyone is on the IL.
Fantastic work so far with this channel. I don’t hand out compliments when they aren’t deserved. Don’t stop pumping these videos out. Your channel will blow up before long.
thank you, appreciate it!
Well, I remember when pitchers like Catfish Hunter just changed speeds and painted the corners with an 88 mph fastball, and managed to throw a perfect game. Gregg Maddox was pretty successful, not sure if he ever threw a fastball in the 90's.
Maddux was definitely throwing in the mid 90s at points in his career, so believe it or not, he threw hard
@@averyfabian9936 True, his fastball touched 93 mph in his early years, but his velocity steadily declined throughout his career, and was never his principal focus as a pitcher. By the end of his career, his fastball averaged less than 86 mph. His four seam fastball was usually around 88 MPH.
@@hvymettle that's definitely true that he was that type of pitcher when he was older, but if he was like that at the beginning of his career, he would probably have never made it to the mlb
You also have to realize that the radar guns today are juiced af.
@breadandcircuses8127 easy. They show higher readings than what the pitch actually is. They measure pitchers as soon as the ball is released as opposed to measuring it as it crosses the plate - as in what the hitter actually sees the pitch as.
For decades they measured velocity this way as it made more sense. Now they do it differently ever since velocity really became a selling point.
Technically this isn’t a “lie” but it’s a sneaky way of fudging the numbers to sell the product.
Baseball's are juiced now. Theyre smaller and more dense which increases speed and spin rate.
dude your content is amazing. keep up the great work. this definitely earned a sub!
While batting averages have gone down I was looking at year over year league wide OPS numbers. The seem to be highest during the steroid era of the 90’s through early 2000’s. However I then compared the last 10 years to years pre-1990 and they are noticeably higher now than they were before the steroid era. The game is seeing more offensive production now than it has for the majority of its history. So hitters do seem to be adjusting. They’re just taking a different approach. I do think MLB balls are definitely juiced today compared to years past as well. Various experiments have shown significantly higher exit velocities on MLB balls vs other baseballs. But you’d really have to get your hands on some much older MLB balls to make the comparison to the current ones. And even then after years of sitting and degrading you couldn’t properly compare the old balls to newly manufactured balls.
I hope the new rules bring back more guys that throw low 90s and paint the corners, great video man
This is why I find it increasingly hard to watch games. Games have become two dimensional with focus on strikeouts and home runs. The fact that players like Kyle Schawarber and Joey Gallo can find themselves in the starting lineup of a major league team is a serious indictment of how messed up the game has become.
It’ll be interesting to see what starts happening to pitcher contracts. If this trend continues, teams may be less likely to dish out massive contracts for pitchers because the injury risk is going to be so much higher.
Could you imagine throwing 112 with an 85 mph change up.... that's softball speed difference and that would be absolutely unhittable
If you can locate it’d be unhittable. But if you can’t locate you could just sit on the off speed stuff and smack it
The strikeout rate didn’t start going up because of higher velocities. It started going up because hitting philosophies have changed
Finally. The quest for homers on every pitch is at fault. Thank you
I mean yes when you combine the power hitting philosophies WITH higher velocities and much higher spin rates. Its not just hitting philosophies.
How does that explain the differing batting averages based on pitch speeds in the same season? It's both.
It’s definitely a combination of both. Pitchers are nastier than ever and the put the ball in play approach is seen less and less
@@jellyfishgamestudios”much higher spin rates” lol. Compared to what?? They didn’t start measuring this nerdy stuff until very recently. God this generation is so full of 💩.
good vid, you have very big potential
I can see people touching 113, but never sitting. I think the highest velo someone will sit will be around 106-107. We have Joyce and Duran throwing consistently at the low 100s, Joyce sits 101-102, Duran touching 104 a lot. These 9th graders who throw 90 nowadays will be this next generation.
The person who throws 110 at some point will probably break their arm doing it, unless it’s reinforced with titanium which would decrease the mechanical fluidity of muscles joints and ligaments, in my opinion
Throwing 113mph would require ~16% more kinetic energy from the pitchers arm compared to throwing 105mph. Kinetic energy is effected by velocity^2 so every extra mph takes an exponentially greater amount of energy through the pitchers arm to make it happen.
It’s probably never going to happen.
Low 90mph will still be effective with location, movement and velocity changes. A 2+4 seam, cutter, changeup, and curve ranging between 75-95.
And i think the injury problem has more to do with the emphasis on the various sliders. The velocity pushing does not help though.
Naw sliders are actually not that bad for your arm when thrown properly. The big issue is that kids throw harder younger. You have some guys who have been able to touch 99+ well before they even hit a minor league affiliate. And since velo seems to be the single most important thing in a scouts eye, they don’t care if you will get hurt, they will use you until the wheels fall off. And that’s the sad reality of baseball now.
And kids throwing too often at a young age.
Yes, the speed along with the slider is what is not helping.
@@rowdyghost4713 It seems that in High School the under 18--19 kids are hitting this level of speed going 99 mph + and yes the teams will just use you becuse of all the talent out there that this is why players now have to retire as pitchers before age 25 in MLB
The problem is the, super high over 100 mph Fastball, then Fastball Slider or Curve Fastball being pushed as the only other 2 pitches used in Baseball currently besides the over 100 mph Fastball. This is why an amazing left hand pitcher I graduated with never made it out of the lower ranks of the Minors in my town Pierre (Pier) South Dakota who graduated in 2007 with me. He was an 80--85 mph hitter but had this Curveball Slider that few could hit and was rarely injured. The reason he did not get further into the Minor leagues was the 2010 was the start of the Speed Pitching only those above 90 mph for every type of pitch that has only increased year after year so that now other pitches like a Curveball or Slider must be pitched at 95+ mph or about 90--95% of a Max Fastball.
Having a diverse arsenal is obviously an effective way to attack hitters. But the rest of your comment is just wrong. Breaking pitches (curveballs, sliders, sweepers, etc) put less stress on the arm than fastballs when thrown correctly. As for throwing a lot at a young age, you need to throw to build arm strength and learn efficient movement patterns. I do agree 11-14 year old kids shouldn’t be throwing hundreds of pitches in a tournament. But kids should be throwing at varying intensities throughout a week of training
Great video, crazy you don't have more subs. Stick with it and you'll grow
I'd add that when Joey Gallo doesn't hit a homerun he also walks quite a lot. Walk rate and a batters plate discipline ( ability recognize strikes from balls,) has become more important too. The poster boy for that trend is Juan Soto who literally shuffles and stares down the pitcher when he takes a difficult pitch to not swing at. Soto's antics aside, hitters being more selective also isn't going to be as exciting, at least for the casual fan.
Andrez munoz is a perfect example of how having the ability to throw fast isnt the most affective. He has an unbelievable fast ball that can hit 103, but he throws his slider 70 percent of the time because its abudently more effective.
Taking the Baseball doesn’t exist route, I like it. I reccomend more dramatic hook to catch viewers it’s one of the secrets
amazing content dude, I can't believe you don't have more subscribers.
What's up Average Baseball? This is good content. Question: Could the high injury rate among pitchers have anything to do with the fact that the pitch-clock removes those extra 10 or seconds of rest that went into the game prior to 2023?
Loving all of your content so far, keep it up man
thank you, got another dropping tomorrow!
1:10 - idk but I feel like BA is the wrong stat to use here bc it doesn’t include walks… how much of that is from faster pitches being harder to locate in the strike zone?
Yo this is a good vid just subscribed
I want Maddux, Glavine, Rogers and Halladay back. Those guys were artists, and extremely fun to watch.
Pitches over 100mph is not the only variable when accounting for record Ks. The modern hitting philosophy leads to this too
Here's a weird idea, anything past 99.9 is a ball but make the zone bigger, not like anything crazy huge but just enough to offset the advantage it gives to hitters
Nah if anything make the zone smaller on faster pitches?
I think they need to move the mound back at least 1.5 ft. to 64 ft. and lower it a few inches (probably like 1 to 2 inches). Modern pitching mechanics are similar to a trebuchet, the longer the arm and motion the higher velocity is possible. This is also why larger pitchers seem to able throw hard easier.
They tried that in the minors and found that breaking pitches moved too much and there were even more strikeouts.
I agree they need to do something.
Watching this makes me appreciate the talentS of Shoei Ohtani even more
I subscribed just for the meme of being here at the beggining of the algorithm bump!
It was hoping they would move the mound back to 63 feet
That might make it easier for hitters but wouldn't solve the injury issue.
All that does is make breaking pitches nastier. I guarantee it would have the opposite effect than intended
Yea I pitched from little league to highschool and at age 13 I played travel baseball for coaches that played pro or college. Now I never threw as hard as these guys throw in today's game but that tells me with all these injuries is that they are not putting ice on their arms after they throw say 7 innings. Because pitchers that throw breaking balls such as curve balls can put a lot of strain on your arm as well. I was always told that it doesn't matter how hard you throw if you can't throw it over the plate. There are pitchers who do side sessions or bullpen sessions before it is their time to pitch again especially starting pitchers. But another aspect can make you throw harder is by throwing long toss because it builds up your arm strength and lifting weights or by throwing a heavier ball before they begin their warmups in the bullpen. But no it's not hurting baseball whatsoever it just sounds like somebody wants to make a big deal out of nothing that doesn't understand the game of baseball
here’s what I think the MLB should do, make a limit of a pitch at 97 or smth and if someone goes above it will be a ball, if its already a ball then it counts as two
I actually think this is the true root cause behind the baseball is boring attitudes that some people have. While it doesn’t bother me, I can see why some people would be less interested in seeing the three true outcomes. IMO, they should try deadening the ball and/or lowering the seems to make it easier to make contact but harder to hit it out. Maybe they could even try raising the mound again. They did try moving the mound back, but that was a disaster because the breaking pitches moved too much. Love or hate the pitch clock, I think it won’t really matter in the long run if the contact rates don’t improve.
It’s kind of strange to see players get to be too good at a sport to the point where it’s less entertaining.
this is a fantastic video. great job man.
appreciate it :)
How many complete games are there this year?
Fast pitching has always effected pitchers. Lot of promising Pitchers end up blowing their arms completely out. There is a limit to what the human arm can take being used that way.
@breadandcircuses8127 Because our muscles are like tight fleshy fibers that are connected by other soft tissue. When you move an arm it's just like moving a machine, Machines break down when they are worn down. So can peoples arms.
@breadandcircuses8127 no worries friend... think of a pitchers arm like one of those Trebuchet (A fancier catapult) look how they move and compare it to a pitchers throw and you'll see what I mean. All that machinery is producing so much force things snap and break.
You say that watching pitchers hit 100mph but do you forget how excited the whole country was when Sammy sosa and mark McGwire were chasing the home run record? Trust me people like seeing baseball be played at that high of a level, I’d bet if you started hitting the ball 700ft people would take notice
Not that we’ve witnessed the peak of pitching but I believe batting has the higher ceiling in baseball. I think the batters will catch up as the game evolves
Pitchers would do better to work on command instead of simply trying to overpower batters. There would be fewer injuries and starters could go longer than 5 or 6 innings.
270 pitchers go into the IL in April? What?
Meanwhile the league leader in ERA as of this comment being posted averages 92 on his fastball
Great video man
I wonder if the mlb will move the mound back to hitters more time to react. Or possibly have a velo limit to protect players.
Like whiffle ball have a 100 mph limit
how would you enforce a velo limit?
“Hey could you stop doing your job so well?” 🤦♂️
Just like a pitch clock. 101 is a ball
Velo limit for pitchers!?!? Embarrassing………you should be ashamed of yourselves😑
If the mound is moved back breaking pitches will be more potent than ever
Fans nowadays only care about two stats. MPH and HR distance.
I’ve said this plenty of times just let the batters use peds and let pitchers use sticky stuff if you gotta regulate it
Duran is also throwing 90 plus breaking balls sometimes even almost 100
Did he just say "in April alone 270 pitchers have been added to injury list" or am i not hearing it right?
Dude, you are awesome
I don't know how they even see the ball!
These video angles are sick. Subbed
Not to nitpick but the intro footage was loosely picked. Kyle Gibson ain’t touching triple digits, and Aroldis Chapman was on the Reds like 10 years ago. Great video, just something that irked me immediately haha.
Still waiting foe the Rays to be in trouble
Great channel
If there were more guy with an approach like Luis Arraez, we would see a lot more guys hitting .325+
Great vid! Keep it up
we should have everyone throw an inning, no pitchers, just players
If this continues, we will one day see a pitcher throwing 150 mph ... until his arm rips off his body and flies through the strike zone with his hand still clutching the baseball.
By that point we will probably be cyborgs, and all of these limits of nature will be behind us.
Players are a lot more replaceable now as there is not very much variation in skill sets and not as much variation in skill level which is also hurting the game
awesome video :)
good vid bro have my sub
All this video did, and I didn’t think that it was possible. was make appreciate Greg Maddux even more.
Soon the pitchers will hit so hard the helmets break and a helmet designed for fastpitch softball heavier ball impact with the cage might have to be used.
Not to pick on Chris Young, but he wasn't exactly a flamethrower when he played...so it's not surprising to hear him say that he doesn't want all of his pitchers with crazy velo, seeing how he was a 6'10" pitcher throwing 91 🤣 he might be a bit opinionated on the topic of velocity and pitching...
Many pitchers are shortening their careers because of trying to throw hard. They don't know how to pitch. Whitey Ford didn't throw hard but had a curve ball that was his out pitch.
You can't get by on junk pitching. A Charlie Hough can't survive against modern hitters. You have to have challenge pitches, and if it's not fast with enough movement, modern hitters will feed on it. You can have tricky stuff, but a heater with movement can go a long way.
They should move the mound back ☝️ foot. For a test. See how it does..
Or the easier option would probably be to move home plate back
I think if baseball favored the game to hitting and there were way more home runs it would actually be fun to watch
Over the decades they've done nearly everything possible to make it easier on hitters. What on earth could they do at this point? 'ok it's an automatic ball if you throw a ball over 100mph'?
Well if you throw a 90 mph pitch right down the middle the ball will be smoked but if you throw a 100 mph pitch right down the middle it would be different
Hitters will adjust!
I'll stick to my Knuckleball and not risk blowing out my arm.
lol,,, who cares , fanboy
You act like you get paid to play 😂🤡
they should limit when you can throw over 100. maybe only if you're in 4th+ place and not dring playoffs but yes during world series. only on tuesday? no that's tacos. wild ass throw wednesday?
High quality. Sub'd.
Baseball never gets old, or woke. Let's go MLB. Shohei, you're my daddy.
Tyler rogers is the exception to this
For those who keep saying that pitchers who stayed healthy and durable were genetic freaks or not throwing that hard, are wrong. If you looked at pitchers such as Ryan, Seaver, Rivera. Their mechanics are similar. When their front foot is on the ground, there arm is up. The mechanics of majority of the modern pitchers set them up for injury.
Arm doctor stock prices going up
Lower the mound or move the rubber back a little.
OPS: 0.799 "his OPS is over 800"
investing in this channel rn 👀
🙏
Rays have been doing this forever. They have all their pitchers just throw max effort 100% of the time and replace them when they get hurt. Seems kind of morally wrong almost.
great video
My ucl started hurting watching this
Actually I find faster pitching honestly boring to the point of the pitcher and catcher playing catch with each other. Honestly I find the all the other fielders to be way too good at the point of almost nobody getting on base with a ball actually hit either caught on a high fly or grounder hits to the outfield easily scooped up and outfielders easily getting the ball to first base throwing almost as fast as a pitcher.
Speak for yourself. I would gladly take a decrease in velocity if it means lower strikeout rates and healthier pitchers.
Right but you cant force ppl to throw slower bev they will get destroyed by hitters
@@maxkeilen4989 Clayton Kershaw and Sunny Gray aren't throwing as fast as they used to and they're doing fine.
@Max Keilen you can though. Just make it a rule that any pitch over 100mph is a ball. Wiffleball does it
@@EvskiiCF thats nonsense. no one gets paid millions to play wiffleball. Wiffleball teams aren’t selling out stadiums in the 30,000 seat range nor do they employ 100s of concession workers who rely on the job to feed their family
@GoodLuckBeatz not nonsense at all. Baseball has a ton of idiotic rules already. You're just ignorant to them or you don't mind those because they've been around forever. Doesn't make then any less dumb
The velocity limit would actually lead to more ticket sales because more hitting would occur and you'd keep arms healthier
Enough with all the silly pretense about PEDs. Make em legal. We deserve to see how a jacked human body (particularly the face) holds up to being hit by a 110mph pitch.
didnt watch the whole video so forgive me if this was said, but im convinced there will come a time when mlb just decides to move the mound back a few feet to compensate for increasing velo
Soon the pitching rubber will be placed a bit farther from the plate.
The pitch clock is the absolute cause of this. Because pitchers have to switch their style as a result, they are going to do things to make up for the fact that the worst commissioner of a sport in history wants less time spent playing the game. Manfred’s hatred of baseball is the cause of all of this.
buddy no it isnt. this has been going on before the pitch clock. also the pitch clock doesnt cause less time spent playing the game. it causes less time wasted by pitchers and batters stalling.
No. This has been an issue even in college, and high school since at least the 2000's. Jeff Passan even wrote a book about it called "The Arm." Tommy John Surgery is routine now; even at lower levels.
Need to lower the mound and the pitching rubber needs to be moved back by 1 foot
Bring back the knuckleball!