cabbagedad posted:
Hahaha.... glad you took up a whole page to try to illustrate that my number may (or may not) be off by 1 MPH. Several sinkers were mid 93's/ low 94's. You do realize that a guy throwing a 93 MPH cutter and 93 MPH sinker is still throwing with a good velo base, right? You do realize that he is just a handful of starts back from the DL but still throwing pretty hard, right? In what book is sitting 93 not good velo?
The reason I did it was to illustrate that not you specifically, but many people throw numbers out there without ever checking their veracity. And FWIW, I've watched every Indians' game this season and all but a couple dozen over the last 10 years, so I'm well aware of Kluber's journey.
You’re the one who said “He also lives around 94 with his 4 seam. When he has had slight mechanical issues and his velo drops to around 92, they are concerned. As good a pitcher as he is, his effectiveness suffers considerably with just a few ticks below really good velo.
That may well be what you believe is true, but it sure doesn’t coincide with their manager or pitching coach.
Here is an excerpt from an MLB piece last year that spells out that he lived at 94+ with his 4-seam when he was most effective... at the time of the article, he was struggling with his mechanics and they were analyzing what adjustments needed to be made to recover that earlier velo... The chart spells out that he lived 93-95 with his 4-seam from '14 thru early '16. So, so much for not being able to find anything to prove what I said was true.
What you said was what someone else said was true, assuming pitchers who don’t throw with the same velocity as when they were the most successful can’t or won’t have success. He sure looked pretty successful the last time he pitched.
Let's simplify...
Your point - "movement and skill make it possible for a lot more pitchers to have success than those who depend on velocity?" There is not a person in the room that wouldn't interpret this to mean that a guy without generally accepted good velo can have some regular degree of success at the MLB level.
Go back and reread the OP without prejudice of any kind if you can. As usual, because of something personal, you’ve completely twisted what I said to mean something you think I said. All I meant was, there are one Hell of a lot of pitchers who can have success at any given level without having velocity much higher than “normal”.
You used Kluber as an example.
My point - Kluber has very good command and movement. But he also has good velo. Generally, you better have a strong velo base to start from. Otherwise, good hitters at that level will eventually pick up on your stuff and figure out how to just sit on you.
But, as always, you want to dig into minutia and argue me being off 1 MPH to somehow make your point right. HE HAS GOOD VELO!!! 92.7, 94.4, both still good. End of story.
I know how this goes with you... you will ignore any valid top line points and find another minutia point to fixate on. So, I will just bow out of this one now.
You always make it personal when I disagree with you, but it never is, at least from me. You made a statement about Kluber’s 4SFB and I put up numbers showing your statement wasn’t accurate. Simple as that. I didn’t say you were a liar or question your integrity. My point was people often make statements that aren’t accurate and put the numbers from his last game up as proof you don’t need to throw more than 94 to have great success at the ML level. Nothing personal at all.