Has the slider become the pitch that college recruiters like to see from a high school pitcher. Would they prefer a great change first?
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quote:Originally posted by hsballcoach:
I feel that college coaches want to see a pitcher with an out pitch. A great change is very valuable at the next level to keep a hitter off-balance and is often overlooked. The slider is a pitch that can more readily cause a swing and miss and is therefore usefull as well. I prefer a kid master spotting his fastball and develop a consistent change and then work on the out pitch, be it a hard curve or slider off the plate. It is important that a kid know what his strike-out pitch is and learn how to use it.
quote:Originally posted by hsballcoach:
Chicks,
I think it really depends on the quality of your change. Even a mediocre change can throw off timing and get pop-ups and ground outs. A good one can definately be an out pitch. I do think, however, that a pitch with some side-to-side or sharp change of direction is great to add to the arsenal at the right time.
quote:Originally posted by 08Dad:
The change can definitely be an out pitch - good examples from the pros are Eric Gagne and especially Trevor Hoffman.
As hsballcoach said - "it really depends upon the quality of your change". If it comes out of the same arm slot, with the same arm action, and has movement (normally down but hopefully some side to side as well), it will be tough on hitters at any level.
quote:Originally posted by ChicksDigTheLongBall:
Yeah, but if it becomes your "out" pitch and then they start looking for it and one would think that it would become a jack-it-out-the-park pitch. What does one do to offset this and what other pitch would it become?
quote:Originally posted by twoseamer:quote:Originally posted by ChicksDigTheLongBall:
Yeah, but if it becomes your "out" pitch and then they start looking for it and one would think that it would become a jack-it-out-the-park pitch. What does one do to offset this and what other pitch would it become?
Hey Chicks!
What you have said can pertain to any 'out' pitch. If you've got one they are going to be looking for it regardless of whether it is a change, slider, curve, etc. A pitcher has to know when and where to throw it to make and keep it effective. It's only an 'out' pitch if you get the batter behind in the count. Once you have him...then you locate the 'out' pitch. Location is everything!
At least that's the way I look at it.