Major League Baseball: So you think you can hit a FASTBALL?

Major League Baseball: So you think you can hit a FASTBALL?

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Major League Baseball: So you think you can hit a FASTBALL?

Hitters only have 125 milliseconds to gauge the average Major League fastball – less than the blink of an eye. And then once you’ve hit it, or at least attempted to knock it out the park, you will need to run around the field to make it to the other end without getting out. Sounds, easy right? Wrong! This takes a lot of strength and endurance, which is why so many players decide to use something like these speed training parachutes during their training sessions to help them improve this particular aspect of their game. But before all of this, you will be faced with the fastball which is coming at you at a very fast speed. Which begs the question: how is this humanly possible?

The fastball is the most common type of pitch thrown by pitchers in baseball and softball. Some “power pitchers,” such as Nolan Ryan and Roger Clemens, have thrown fastballs at speeds of 95–105 mph (152.9–169.14 km/h) (officially) and up to 108.1 mph (174 km/h) (unofficially), relying purely on speed to prevent the ball from being hit.

Others throw more slowly but put movement on the ball or throw it on the outside of the plate where the batter cannot easily reach it. The appearance of a faster pitch to the batter can sometimes be achieved by minimizing the batter’s vision of the ball before its release. The result is known as an “exploding fastball”: a pitch that seems to arrive at the plate quickly despite its low velocity.

Fastballs are usually thrown with backspin, so that the Magnus effect creates an upward force on the ball, causing it to fall less rapidly than might be expected. A pitch on which this effect is most marked is often called a “rising fastball.”

Although it is impossible for a human to throw the pitch fast enough with enough backspin for the ball to actually rise, it does create the illusion of a riser to the batter due to the unexpected lack of natural drop on the pitch. Colloquially, use of the fastball is called ‘throwing heat’ or ‘putting steam on it’, among many other variants.

Gripping the ball with the fingers across the wide part of the seam (“four-seam fastball”) so both the index and middle fingers are touching two seams perpendicularly produces a straight pitch, gripping it across the narrow part (“two-seam fastball”) so that both the index and middle fingers are along a seam produces a sinking fastball, holding a four-seam fastball off-center (“cut fastball”) imparts lateral movement to the fastball, and splitting the fingers along the seams (“split-finger fastball”) produces a sinking action with a lateral break.

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