DVD-quality lessons (including tabs/sheet music) available for immediate viewing on any device.
Take your playing to the next level with the help of a local or online banjo teacher.
Weekly newsletter includes free lessons, favorite member content, banjo news and more.
Page: 1 2 Last Page (2)
Last night watching the Mariners and the Tigers, the announcers mention that Detroit reliever Tommy Kahnle "throws almost all changeups", and later "he stays with the changeup about 85% of the time." With one batter "that's six straight changeups in a row." Now, silly me thought that a changeup was a pitch that looks like a fastbal but is slower in speed to fool the batter, no? And----if you keep throwing the same pitch over and over then it can't legitimately be a "change up" can it? Because nothing is changing! Are they not just relatively slow fastballs? And, since he does on rare occasions throw a fast fastball, is not the fastball now his true "changeup?"
Deep thoughts on a Wednesday afternoon.
I don't think a pitch is named because of the frequency/proportion it's used.
Unless he never threw a fast(er) fastball ... in which case I'd hafta emulate Chuck, i.e. this calls for more pondering.
Deciphering biesbol cliches, idioms, and downright babble could be a full time job, IMNSHumbleO.
P.S. I think those "six straight changeups in a row" was actually, "six straight consecutive changeups in a row." ![]()
Yeah; I’ve been sore puzzled in recent years by the proliferation of “changeups” that engender that obvious question: Change from what? “Changeup” has become the shorthand for “off-speed pitch,” which term makes no claim to be a “change,” but rather a slower-than-typical delivery. Philosophical question addendum: Can a pitcher’s first pitch be a “changeup?” And if so, how?
^^ Bill R. I think so. Pitching is the art of deception. If you fool the batter then you have won. So I would say that IF the batter is "sitting on the fastball" because that is what that pitcher is know for, and/or, this is a situation where a fastball is usually called for, but now the pitcher fools the batter with an unexpected slow pitch, then that would be a first pitch changeup. I think!
Bearing in mind that my hitting was typically "out on the interstate" ....
In that the changeup delivery is to mimick the fastball delivery of that particular pitcher, "slower-than-typical" refers to that particular pitcher's typical fastball delivery, not that of another pitcher or some league-wide standard, or ???, regardless of the proportion of use. The label we put on the pitches of a two-pitch pitcher [i.e. fastball and change] stays the same regardless of the sequence he employs .... IMNSHumbleO.
Are there two-pitch pitchers who use changeup and curve/slider/slurve/screwball/etc. [i.e. NOT a fastball] as their "other" pitch?
In addition to being slower than the fastball, I suspect that a good change-up also has some kind of movement( left, right, down) that is intended to fool the batter. If the movement is more effective than the speed change in fooling the batter, that might explain why the pitch would be used repetitively.
quote:
Originally posted by banjo bill-e^^ Bill R. I think so. Pitching is the art of deception. If you fool the batter then you have won. So I would say that IF the batter is "sitting on the fastball" because that is what that pitcher is know for, and/or, this is a situation where a fastball is usually called for, but now the pitcher fools the batter with an unexpected slow pitch, then that would be a first pitch changeup. I think!
Well argued. I'll buy in.
I did a search under "baseball definitions" and found: "A changeup in baseball is an off-speed pitch that resembles a fastball but arrives significantly slower. It is designed to deceive the batter into swinging too early, disrupting their timing and increasing the likelihood of a swing and miss. Changeups are typically thrown with the same motion and grip as a fastball, but with the ball held farther back in the hand, resulting in a slower release. "
Any significant movement would make it one of the many varieties of "breaking ball".
I think the movement (?) is downward primarily due to less energy being transferred to the ball on delivery. I can see a hitter being fooled by thinking: "He's thrown _X__ changes ... so I'm sitting on fastball." [Edit: and if it arrives in it's intended location [i.e. below strike zone], even If the hitter guesses correctly, chances are it will be a lightly hit ground ball???]
Some time back I was watching ball on TV. The pitcher tossed in a 55-footer ... maybe a change, but more likely a fastball.
I observed, kinda loudly; "What the heck ya doing?!?!?" A voice from 'round the corner in the kitchen came back: "Washing the floor ... somebody has to do it!"
Edited by - Owen on 10/08/2025 13:13:13
If I remember right, a pitcher gets less velocity on a pitch by throwing it with the fingers and not from the palm of the hand, but with the same arm action.
Edited by - chuckv97 on 10/08/2025 13:59:06
chuck97,
I was not a pitcher, but I think that the fastball uses the fingers, particularly the index and middle fingers, to power the ball (with the seams for a two-seamer and across the seams for a four-seamer), and for the changeup most pitchers move the ball to the base of the fingers or palm of the hand and use the same motion they use for a fastball. So the arm is moving like they are throwing a fastball, but the fingers that power up a fastball are minimally involved, so the ball doesn't have the same speed on it. There's even different kinds of changeup pitches that totally remove the index finger from having much impact on the delivery like the 'circle-change' for instance. The pitcher holds the ball like he's about to give someone the "ok" sign with the index finger curled in a circle. The baseball is moved over a little toward the pinkie by doing this, and the ball is thrown with the middle, ring, and pinkie fingers taking the index finger right out of it. The ball comes at the batter slower, but with the same arm motion from the pitcher it looks like it might be a fastball.
Your definition of 'changeup,' is what I've always heard as well. So many pitches now its confusing to know what distinguishes one from the other. Heard Tom Glavine, past Braves great pitcher say recently that pitches threw so many different pitches now that he couldn't understand how they could master any of them. And he should know.
Bobby
quote:
Originally posted by RB3In addition to being slower than the fastball, I suspect that a good change-up also has some kind of movement( left, right, down) that is intended to fool the batter. If the movement is more effective than the speed change in fooling the batter, that might explain why the pitch would be used repetitively.
Correct. I think Bill Rogers "slower than typical delivery" is incorrect and that a change-up is designed to have the same delivery motion as a fastball. It is the way the ball is gripped and released that slows the ball down ...... not the delivery. I also understand what BillE is saying in his first post, but the change-up is a particular type pf pitch regardless of how many times it is thrown. If not, I guess you could call a slider a "change-up" after throwing six fastballs in a row.
quote:
Originally posted by STUD figmo AlWay to deep n fill-ah-sockfull... of a subject... Fer me to compensate... :0/
Al ..... some things are just too complicated!
quote:
Originally posted by raybobchuck97,
I was not a pitcher, but I think that the fastball uses the fingers, particularly the index and middle fingers, to power the ball (with the seams for a two-seamer and across the seams for a four-seamer), and for the changeup most pitchers move the ball to the base of the fingers or palm of the hand and use the same motion they use for a fastball. So the arm is moving like they are throwing a fastball, but the fingers that power up a fastball are minimally involved, so the ball doesn't have the same speed on it. There's even different kinds of changeup pitches that totally remove the index finger from having much impact on the delivery like the 'circle-change' for instance. The pitcher holds the ball like he's about to give someone the "ok" sign with the index finger curled in a circle. The baseball is moved over a little toward the pinkie by doing this, and the ball is thrown with the middle, ring, and pinkie fingers taking the index finger right out of it. The ball comes at the batter slower, but with the same arm motion from the pitcher it looks like it might be a fastball.
Correct on all counts!
I played fast pitch softball in both the Textile League in my hometown (often on the same field that Shoeless Joe Jackson played on) and later when I was in the Marine Corps. As you might guess, a larger softball is easier to curve, drop, and even a rise ball (called a riser although it does not actually rise but appears to due to spin and trajectory). I was pretty good hitter, but could not hit a change-up. If any of our opposing pitchers ever kept a book on me, my average would have been around 00.0.
I've read/seen the science w.r.t the riser, but, but, but .....
We had a guy that made it to the Winnipeg Colonels [top level in the country], but prior to that was a team mate on our lower level team. When he threw a riser without telling me, I often couldn't catch it .... I was holding my glove too low. IF the illusion was that it was rising, my logic says that I would have been holding my glove above it's actual trajectory. No wonder I wasn't one of the team's stalwarts. ![]()
Page: 1 2 Last Page (2)