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Knuckle Sandwich

13
Vote

by user Mycue23

The Knuckleball is the strangest pitch ever invented. It perfoms like the five D's of Dodgeball; dodge, dip, duck, dive and dodge (I know dodge is in there twice, but I'm just quoting the movie). It always amazes me when someone can become a successful pitcher throwing a pitch that is for all intents and purposes, uncontrollable. It's basically a freak pitch that baffles the people trying to hit it, catch it and often times, the people who are throwing it. Watching Tim Wakefield last night and the adventures of his catcher was quite amusing at times. He actually gave a run without giving up a hit, thanks to three passed balls in one inning. He actually struck out Arod, but he reached on a passed ball (which is, by the way, one of the seven ways to reach first base without a hit). Arod then advanced to second on a passed ball and then scored from third on a passed ball.

The Knuckleball, in it's current incarnation, is not thrown with the knuckles but with the fingertips. The basic idea is to impart as little spin as possible and let the ball to float to home plate on the wings of fate. The knuckleball has been thrown with the knuckles in the past and I'm sure there are pitchers somewhere who still do it that way, but recently, at the major league level at least, it's been all about the fingertips. I'm not sure why the more recent crop only uses the fingertips but perhaps it has something to do with the success enjoyed by Phil Neikro or perhaps Hoyt Wilhelm or Wilbur Wood. I can't say for sure. Neikro and Wilhelm are both in the Hall of Fame and Wood won 20 games a season for four years in a row in the seventies, so clearly the fingertip grip worked very well for them.

There is definitely a bias against knuckle ball pitchers. No knuckleballer has ever won the Cy Young award although Wood and Phil Neikro certainly had seasons in which they were worthy. Baseball scouts would probably dismiss most prospects who relied too heavily on the pitch. Today it's all about making the radar gun light up and the knuckleball is never going to do that. The most likely scenario of a pitcher reaching the majors as a knuckleballer would involve an arm injury to a prospect who then converts to throwing the knuckleball in order to salvage his career. A team that has invested money would be willing to give that pitcher a chance to show that he can still be effective. However, a college or high school pitcher who throws it, would probably never get signed in the first place.

There are pitchers who use a variations of the knuckleball to great effect. Mike Mussina is the most famous proponent of the knuckle curve and the knuckle change. Once again he uses his fingertips, but with only one finger. The other finger is used in a conventional style. His pitches have neither the movement nor the randomness of the regular knuckleball. In fact he can throw them with pinpoint control. They have the same movement that one would associate with a normally thrown curveball or change up. It seems that the knuckle portion of these pitches doesn't really add much too them. Mussina would never have made it off the campus of Stanford if he relied on a conventional knuckleball.

Knuckle ball pitchers are a rare breed. In fact Tim Wakefield is in fact the only major league pitcher who uses it almost exclusively. Steve Sparks was a knuckleballer as well, but he's not pitching in the majors this year and it would be a stretch of the imagination to call him successful. Clearly the pitch is difficult to master but it can lead to a very long career. The pitch is rarely thrown at speeds above a batting practice fastball. Phil and Joe Niekro along with Hoyt Wilhelm pitched effectively well into their forties using the Knuckleball as their primary weapon. Wakefield has enjoyed a long career relying on the pitch. He came up as a 25 year old and immediately went 8-1 with a 2.15 ERA. The following year he 6-11 with a 5.61 ERA. The year after that, he was back in the minors and then released by the Pirates. The year after that he resurfaced with the Red Sox and went 16-8 with a 2.95 ERA. That is what makes the knuckleball so frustrating. It can be just as big a mystery to the people who throw it as it is to the people trying to hit it.

It's not hard to imagine a day when there will be no knuckleballers in major league baseball. At this point there is only one knuckleball pitcher who is enjoying success in the minors and Wakefield is holding up the tent in the majors all by himself. He is 38 years old, but if past successful knuckleballers are any indicator, he probably has at least 5 years left in his tank. Hopefully the pitch doesn't go the way of the dinosaurs. It would be a shame if the pitch were lost to major league baseball forever. The pitch is fairly simple to throw and does not require great arm strength (Wilbur Wood actually pitched both ends of a double header in the seventies), so I can always imagine the day when some kid or some almost senior citizen out of nowhere makes it to the majors by learning to harness the magic and mystery that is the knuckleball.


Date

Wed 06/28/06, 12:33 pm EST


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Alex HolowczakHall of Famer
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
The knuckle-ball is a great pitch. On a PS2 game, I couldn't hit Wakefield, so tried stealing bases. I managed to steal third on a strike! Love the pitch though. You just guess how you hit it as a hitter. I'd love to see a Physicist answer how on Earth something with no spin deviates in the air so much.
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ChristofMVP
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
If the knuckleball is just a great pitch, why do only a few pitchers use it?
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Alex HolowczakHall of Famer
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
Because it's luck. No pitcher has a clue whether it'll be a strike or a ball. No hitter can swing knowing full well what's going to happen to it. I didn't realise Mussina had a knuckle-curve and knuckle-changeup. Is suppose that at least that gives him more control than Wakefield. I like the knuckle-ball being unique... we remember Sparks for it, but couldn't name some players in some team's current rotation/bullpen.
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Ray agmJV Squad
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
I've always wondered how Mussina throws a knuckle-curve. If knuckleballs have no inherent spin, how the hell does that thing curve??? Anyways, I too would hate to see the knuckleball go the way of the Eephus.
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Mycue23Waterboy
1250 days ago
Score 2+-
Ray, It's not a true Knuckleball. It's thrown with the same basic motion as a curveball however the middle finger is in the Knuckleball grip and the index finger in a conventional grip. It isn't pushed off the fingers like a knuckleball it's thrown like a curveball. It doesn't really have any of the Knuckleball properties, it just gets it's name from the fact that one of the fingers has the same position as a Knuckleball. I guess some pitcher have better control/success with that grip.
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CoreyisarealboyMajor Leaguer
1250 days ago
Score 2+-
I've also heard it called the spike curveball as well.
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Ray agmJV Squad
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
I see...so it's a misnomer and actually has no "wobble." thanks.
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ChachiOSUDraft Pick
1250 days ago
Score 0+-
I'm going out in my back yard to practice my knuckleball. It's probably the only way I could ever pitch in the majors.
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Anonymous Fanatic #1
861 days ago
Score 0+-
I often throw the knuckleball with out or maybe half a spin on the way to the plate and it seems like its going straight and dipping at the last second. Is this the way its supposed to be? Is there a minimum of velocity required for the ball to change angles in the air?
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