Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TRF
Sparks is a testament to just how hard it is to throw a knuckleball. it took him years to learn to throw it, and he had one good year at age 35.
If a team could identify 3-4 guys in low A or rookie ball, and develop them all through the minors, that'd be something.
He was nearly a league-average pitcher for his career until his last couple stops when he was 37 and 38. If you can take a mediocre pitching prospect and turn him into a league-average starting pitcher by teaching him the knuckleball that can be very valuable...
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RANDY IN INDY
Why?
I don't know about him, but when I tried to throw it, I found that, while I could throw it with no spin by tossing it softly, any time you put any kind of velocity behind it, the ball would spin. In high school, I had a coach on my rec league team who pitched college ball at Colgate (before they cut the program). He was a junk ball pitcher who would show us how to throw pitches like the knuckleball and the forkball, although he forbid us from using practice time working on them because he didn't want us wasting time on trying to throw difficult pitches rather than working on fundamentals. So we'd try to throw it after practice. It was really tough to throw. Put too much oomph into it and it spins, not enough and it doesn't make it to the plate. Grip it too tight and is spins, not tight enough and it slips out of your hand wrong. I think throwing a knuckleball is as much an art as it is a science and sometime you just have to have a knack for throwing it.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Here's a piece on Niekro from last summer
http://www.greenwichtime.com/sports/...ll-4667080.php
BTW, I wouldn't think Leake would not be a good candidate to be a knuckleball pitcher, IMO. While he's a soft thrower, I think he understands what needs to be done to be effective. I think these days, you're going to see guys learn the pitch who might not otherwise have a successful MLB career, hence the O's (and via this cited article, the Braves) having Niekro working with some minor leagues. As I recall, the three O's pitchers were all a bit older for their levels.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Yachtzee
I don't know about him, but when I tried to throw it, I found that, while I could throw it with no spin by tossing it softly, any time you put any kind of velocity behind it, the ball would spin. In high school, I had a coach on my rec league team who pitched college ball at Colgate (before they cut the program). He was a junk ball pitcher who would show us how to throw pitches like the knuckleball and the forkball, although he forbid us from using practice time working on them because he didn't want us wasting time on trying to throw difficult pitches rather than working on fundamentals. So we'd try to throw it after practice. It was really tough to throw. Put too much oomph into it and it spins, not enough and it doesn't make it to the plate. Grip it too tight and is spins, not tight enough and it slips out of your hand wrong. I think throwing a knuckleball is as much an art as it is a science and sometime you just have to have a knack for throwing it.
I agree that it is a difficult pitch to "tame" but I see kids throwing them all the time in practice, and a lot of them real good ones. I could throw a pretty good one when I was younger, but I never took the pitch real seriously, concentrating on the fastball, curve, slider and change. You always see people throwing them in baseball practice and like I said, a lot of them are really good.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RANDY IN INDY
I agree that it is a difficult pitch to "tame" but I see kids throwing them all the time in practice, and a lot of them real good ones. I could throw a pretty good one when I was younger, but I never took the pitch real seriously, concentrating on the fastball, curve, slider and change. You always see people throwing them in baseball practice and like I said, a lot of them are really good.
I'd say that's impressive, but I also think kids today focus more on one sport than they used to. For me and my friends, we played rec league ball in the summer and that was it. Sure, we played waffle ball or tossed the ball around on our own at times, but we also played soccer, golf, pick up basketball, sandlot football, and dabbled in various sports we saw on Wild World of Sports, like rugby, Australian Rules Football, and Cricket. One summer much of our time was spent building a dirt BMX track in the woods behind the school. I knew of one kid in our grade who played on a travel team with kids from other schools. The rest of us just hung out and did whatever. And when we hit middle school, chasing girls tended to push sports to the sideline. So by the time we were in high school, we still played baseball for fun, but since we had no illusions of playing beyond high school, we spent much of our non-baseball time either going out on dates, trying to get dates, or working part-time jobs to pay for dates. Spending time practicing the knuckleball just wasn't on the list of priorities.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Yachtzee
Spending time practicing the knuckleball just wasn't on the list of priorities.
Spending time? Knuckleball practice is what warming up is all about.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
kpresidente
Spending time? Knuckleball practice is what warming up is all about.
Actually, rec league baseball in the early to mid-'80s was like a cross between "The Bad News Bears" and "Dazed and Confused, " with more mullets. From about 8th grade on, warm ups was a euphemism for going to smoke behind the equipment shed. Rather than Timmy Lupus, our worst player was a kid named "Oregano, " so called because our second baseman sold him a bag of the culinary herb, which he proceeded to smoke thinking it was weed and pretended to get high. We had one coach (the one before the Colgate pitcher) who drove a Camaro and looked like a cross between Woody Wooderson and Uncle Rico from Napoleon Dynamite. He had a pool party for us at the end of the season and had no qualms about passing out beer to the players. We were mostly latch-key kids and there were no Helicopter parents at practices. We would do a little extra throwing after practice while we hung out with the teammates whose parents were picking them up, but that was about it. I remember the Colgate coach getting the players that smoked to switch to dip because they wouldn't get short of breath running the bases.
Today you can't imagine kids 14-17 years old openly smoking or doing dip, but back then my high school actually had an area in the parking lot called The Pit, where students could go smoke. Guys would use dip in study hall.
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
You always hear about position players who have tremendous Knucklers!
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RANDY IN INDY
You always hear about position players who have tremendous Knucklers!
Lots of infielders guys who just need to stretch out their arms daily
Re: Teaching the Knuckleball
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RANDY IN INDY
You always hear about position players who have tremendous Knucklers!
Tim Wakefield, who couldn't hit a lick, has said that if his manager in the low minors hadn't seen him goofing around with the knuckleball (and convinced Pirate brass to give him a shot as a pitcher), he wouldn't have made it to High A ball.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/mi...d=wakefi001tim
Did any of you watch "The Next Knuckler?"