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“Lab-Grown” Pitches Are Making Hitting More Difficult Than Ever

SI·Tom Verducci·about 1 month ago
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#mlb#tomverducci#pitches#trout#mets#fastballs
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Welcome to Verducci’s View, a new weekly baseball newsletter from Sports Illustrated senior writer Tom Verducci. Every Monday, Tom will empty out his notebook and cover MLB’s hottest topics, provide in-depth analysis through both text and video breakdowns, look forward to what’s worth watching during the week and more. This week, we’re focusing on “lab-grown” pitches, the Mets’ dreadful start and more. Hitting is more difficult than ever. Hitters must try to crack a code that involves more velocity, more spin and—here’s the latest subterfuge—more choices than ever. Over the past two seasons a massive change has gained widespread adoption among pitchers: adding pitches to make the ball move in multiple directions. Pitchers can call on a suite of pitches decided specifically for left- and right-handed hitters or certain swing paths. Max Fried of the Yankees has been at the forefront of this shift. In 2024 with the Braves, he threw his four-seam/curveball combination 53.2% of the time.…

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