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Originally posted by shoxlax View Post
Just my thoughts, 72’. Kung floats a question out there and goes AWOL while we are crafting well reasoned responses.
I kid! I kid! All great responses!Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by wufan006 View Post
depends on what your secondary pitches areKung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by Kung Wu View Post
Not being a smart-ass here, this is a legit follow-up question: If you are a top-10 in the country D1 pitcher, can't we all assume you have very good command over an array of pitches to draw on? Or is it possible to be considered one of the very best pitchers in D1 and you only have one pitch -- say a knuckleball -- that you're just extremely good at?
My point about velo earlier was that there are way more important metrics that make a pitcher difficult to hit other than velo, most all have been brought up since my earlier post. Look at how many hard hit balls Snead gave up this last year on fastball, guessing that he averaged 96-97 per fastball which is certainly elite.
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Originally posted by wufan006 View Post
I am not aware of any college pitcher current or in the past that is or has been dominant with 1 pitch...Could it happen - sure it could. I'm sure that I am missing someone though.
My point about velo earlier was that there are way more important metrics that make a pitcher difficult to hit other than velo, most all have been brought up since my earlier post. Look at how many hard hit balls Snead gave up this last year on fastball, guessing that he averaged 96-97 per fastball which is certainly elite.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by wufan006 View Post
I am not aware of any college pitcher current or in the past that is or has been dominant with 1 pitch...Could it happen - sure it could. I'm sure that I am missing someone though.
My point about velo earlier was that there are way more important metrics that make a pitcher difficult to hit other than velo, most all have been brought up since my earlier post. Look at how many hard hit balls Snead gave up this last year on fastball, guessing that he averaged 96-97 per fastball which is certainly elite.
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Originally posted by Shockm View PostLots of Pitching guru’s poking their head out now. I’ve heard Maddox and Rivera mentioned several times. The thing about Maddox is that he had pin point location control. Very few pitchers have pin point control
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