Why The Knuckleball Is Basically Extinct... The Unpredictable Pitch With NO SPIN..

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  • čas přidán 9. 05. 2024
  • What happened to the KNUCKLEBALL? It was a pitch that helped extend and make the careers of many pitchers such as R.A. Dickey, Tim Wakefield and the Niekro brothers Joe Niekro and Phil Niekro.. In modern baseball, the pitch is extremely rare and there are currently no pitchers who use it! Humm Baby Baseball will examine a couple reasons why that might be.
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @scottstewart5784
    @scottstewart5784 Před rokem +758

    Wakefield lasted so long with the Red Sox because he basically said use me how you like. Starter, reliever, spot starter, and his salary was a flat $5M each year (the last several years) - they had an understanding - I want to pitch, if you want me to pitch too, it's $5M. Even when he had great years - he understood what he was, and he rode that home-town-discounted $5M/year until he was 44. Because of that selfless attitude, and the knuckler, he was a huge local fan favorite.

    • @Travisimo27
      @Travisimo27 Před rokem +105

      Imagine being so good at something you take a 5 million dollar salary and get worshipped for the discount.

    • @tomf5823
      @tomf5823 Před rokem +43

      he also does a TON of charity work.

    • @garrydhintz8017
      @garrydhintz8017 Před rokem +51

      Wake is still my favorite pitcher. Such a rare breed of athlete. Basically the guy who showed up every day and did whatever it took to help his team.

    • @twistedladder3506
      @twistedladder3506 Před rokem +44

      I mean who needs more than 5 million realistically anyways? Most of us live and die never having over 100k at any one time. He seemed like a realist, taking a longer career over a short one that pays more.

    • @zaktilzer5130
      @zaktilzer5130 Před rokem +14

      @@twistedladder3506 Its about generational wealth. Not just your own wealth imo.
      Being able to know your kids, your grand kids, your grand kids kids will not need to worry about money, would take a lot of stress off.

  • @jlh4jc
    @jlh4jc Před rokem +665

    A knuckleballer between 2 flame throwers in your rotation could be advantageous. The 1980 Astros had JR Richard and Nolan Ryan in their rotation until Richard's unfortunate stroke. But they didn't pitch back to back. Instead, Joe Niekro was sandwiched in between. So imagine a weekend series facing JR with the gas and wicked slider, then adjusting to Niekro's flutter ball, then now adjusting to strikeout king Nolan.

    • @ernestdunphy7027
      @ernestdunphy7027 Před rokem +5

      cruel! :-)

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem +19

      That's what the Dodgers did with Tom Candiotti too, even more so because they didn't have any left-handed starters at the time.

    • @tomf5823
      @tomf5823 Před rokem +7

      @@mal2ksc i remember the dodgers went something like 5 years without a lefty making a start

    • @MrBendylaw
      @MrBendylaw Před rokem +5

      I actually can't imagine that; particularly given how _casual_ Ryan and Richard were with the strike zone.

    • @marcstevens8576
      @marcstevens8576 Před rokem +4

      I'm glad you mentioned J.R,. He was a terrific pitcher until his health declined.

  • @frozyre7854
    @frozyre7854 Před 7 měsíci +23

    And one of the great knuckleball pitchers had recently passed, RIP Tim Wakefield.

  • @richdouglas2311
    @richdouglas2311 Před rokem +343

    "Wind currents" don't move the ball. The ball moves because of uneven air pressure due to its lack of spin. Spin creates lift (the Bernoulli Effect). Because the knuckler doesn't spin (much), air pressure can build up on one side of the ball or the other, causing to to change direction in flight. Although some pitchers develop a tendency in terms of ball flight direction, it is nearly random for the most part. Thus, it's unpredictability (for the pitcher, the hitter, the catcher, and the umpire).
    Bob Uecker once said that catching the knuckleball was easy. "I just wait for it to stop rolling and then I go over and pick it up."

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman Před rokem +14

      Spin creating lift is the Magnus effect. Bernoulli's principles
      /law describe pressure and velocity's relation, allowing for other effects such as the Magnus effect

    • @adamdavis5312
      @adamdavis5312 Před rokem +11

      Nice to know scientists also love baseball ..

    • @poindextertunes
      @poindextertunes Před rokem +13

      wind absolutely influences the movement of pitches

    • @SeanCMonahan
      @SeanCMonahan Před rokem +2

      The reason the uneven air pressure can build up is the raised stitching. The ideal knuckler doesn't have NO spin, just enough to have the profile of the stitching change while it's in flight. I've read that ideally the ball should make between 1 and 1.5 full rotations. (As a side note, throwing a knuckleball into a headwind does provide additional break, sometimes a lot more.)

    • @alltruthmatters4395
      @alltruthmatters4395 Před rokem

      But why doesn’t gravity pull it down? Hint, gravity is an unproven theory, a lie. Research flat earth, it’s Bible and Truth

  • @Dulcimerist
    @Dulcimerist Před rokem +476

    Bob Uecker (announcer in the film Major League) was one of the absolute best personal catchers for legendary knuckleballer Phil Niekro. Some good Uecker quotes:
    “Catching Niekro’s knuckleball was great. I got to meet a lot of important people. They all sit behind home plate.”
    “In those days, Phil had less control. Sometimes I’d know before he let go of it that it was going to get by me. I’d just start running and play it off the wall. At least I got to know a lot of the folks in the box seats.”
    "In 1967 I set a major-league record for passed balls, and I did that without playing every game. There was a game, as a matter of fact, during that year when Phil Niekro's brother (Joe) and he were pitching against each other in Atlanta. Their parents were sitting right behind home plate. I saw their folks that day more than they did the whole weekend."
    "Every time (Niekro) started, I went through the same ritual before the game. I took four aspirin for the headache I knew I would have afterwards."

    • @poindextertunes
      @poindextertunes Před rokem +22

      gawd Uecker was great 😂

    • @drewucsc
      @drewucsc Před rokem +77

      "The way to catch a knuckleball is to wait until it stops rolling and then pick it up."

    • @aspiceronni4462
      @aspiceronni4462 Před rokem +14

      Bob is the announcer for the Brewers.

    • @terrywest111
      @terrywest111 Před rokem +9

      God, I love Bob Uecker. The man is a legend and always makes me smile.

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před rokem +9

      I tried to master it. If that is possible.
      I just aimed for the middle of the plate and belt high. Knew it was NOT going to go there.
      But the problem was nobody wanted to catch it.

  • @marshaevelyn1
    @marshaevelyn1 Před rokem +96

    My favourite story about knuckleballers is the one told by Johnny Bench. Sparky Anderson mentioned to Bench that the Reds were looking into trading for Charlie Hough. Bench's response was, "you better trade for Hough's catcher too."

    • @raymondhopwood9393
      @raymondhopwood9393 Před rokem +1

      Bench also said that Phil Niekro was the pitcher he feared the most because of his knuckleball. Ironically, he the only hitter to hit a home run off Niekro's Ephus pitch.

    • @canoebelue
      @canoebelue Před 10 měsíci +2

      LMAO!🤣

    • @nickandres7829
      @nickandres7829 Před 7 měsíci

      When the Blue Jays traded for Dickey, they also traded for Danny Jansen to catch for him.

    • @nickhughes8179
      @nickhughes8179 Před 7 měsíci +1

      That was Josh Thole who came with Dickey. Jansen is their current catcher

    • @nickandres7829
      @nickandres7829 Před 7 měsíci

      @@nickhughes8179 Oh right, my bad.

  • @MrVisde
    @MrVisde Před rokem +106

    I’ve heard the knuckleball described as a survival pitch. Players develop it when it’s their last shot at making the Show. Wakefield was an infielder in the minor leagues who was about to get cut when he said “uh, I can throw a knuckleball”

    • @MmoviesE
      @MmoviesE Před rokem +19

      Yup I only topped out at 85 so I had to resort to being a junk pitcher so my senior year of highschool i added the knuckle ball to my pitches. In my warmup pens before I started, I would throw 2 or 3 of them to see if it was working that day. It usually depended on the length and strength of my finger nails. Catchers could never catch it though so I would only ever use it while bases were empty.

    • @yankees29
      @yankees29 Před rokem +2

      @@MmoviesE i remember watching that game when Neikro had the finger nail board in his back pocket and got caught by the ump using it to scuff the ball.😂

    • @robertkelly6282
      @robertkelly6282 Před rokem +1

      Lol I pitched modified fast pitch softball got older speed went down until I taught myself the Kb

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před rokem +4

      Wade Boggs pitched a few innings in relief throwing a knuckler. He did well.

    • @yankees29
      @yankees29 Před rokem

      @@joemarshall4226 I was watching that game live too.🤣

  • @vijaynair2403
    @vijaynair2403 Před rokem +120

    One of my favorite things to watch in baseball is to see a slo-mo of a knuckleball with close to no spin fluttering towards the plate.

    • @Eralen00
      @Eralen00 Před rokem +11

      Its really crazy, some of these clips have absolutely zero spin. If you've ever thrown anything in your life you know how hard that is. Our natural body mechanics just make it spin.

    • @jaystitzie4743
      @jaystitzie4743 Před rokem

      I got to see Mickey Jannis in AA a few years back right behind home plate. It was really something to watch.

    • @franco8752
      @franco8752 Před 11 měsíci

      thats not slow motion lol

  • @gandhi3625
    @gandhi3625 Před rokem +327

    This really needs to come back into the current game

    • @HummBabyBaseball
      @HummBabyBaseball  Před rokem +21

      yes!

    • @kevingohdcantgo12-09
      @kevingohdcantgo12-09 Před rokem +22

      Mlb the show would be a nightmare

    • @kumarg3598
      @kumarg3598 Před rokem +7

      It's hard to teach. Have you seen the documentary about the knuckleball.

    • @SnipeyGaming
      @SnipeyGaming Před rokem +10

      It wont ever come back. It's a gimmick pitch and very inconsistent and almost impossible to stay consistent

    • @fernandoacosta7423
      @fernandoacosta7423 Před rokem +6

      @@SnipeyGaming I won’t say it’ll never comeback , but we’re not seeing a knuckleballer for a cool minute

  • @moncorp1
    @moncorp1 Před rokem +129

    I had a friend in college who could throw the knuckleball. He took me to the side of the dorm one time and threw it to me. It was scary trying to catch it. He told me to quit trying to catch it and just swat it down with the glove I was using. I had no catchers mask or pads. When that thing darted toward your face at the last second it was unnerving.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před rokem +6

      When I played Babe Ruth ball in high school, there was one kid that could throw a good knuckler and I never could hit it worth a damn. The few times I even caught a piece of it, I was lucky. It is such a weird pitch.

    • @Nevernow721
      @Nevernow721 Před rokem +7

      I'd love to see the pitch come back.

    • @darrenbernat7349
      @darrenbernat7349 Před rokem +2

      Your story sounds like mine. My college roommate over the summer was a knuckler that pitched for our college team. I went out to play catch with him. That did not last long. The ball was literally going all over the place.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před rokem +2

      @@darrenbernat7349
      No joke. I swear it messes with your mind.

    • @terrenceolivido741
      @terrenceolivido741 Před měsícem

      yeah, i had a high school friend who asked me to catch in the gym. for some reason i was always afraid of hard ball. I played contact sports but no baseball. well, i sweated out 10 mins of catching before my friend had mercy on me.

  • @jeffking887
    @jeffking887 Před rokem +126

    Jim Bouton wrote in his book Ball Four that he had to throw daily to keep his knuckleball sharp and managers didn’t like it because they thought his arm would be too tired. He said the knuckleball placed no strain in his arm and he could throw more pitches. He came a up as a fire baller but injured his arm and used the knuckleball to extend his career. Ball Four is a good read but baseball and especially commissioner Bowie Kuhn hated it.

    • @astrobullivant5908
      @astrobullivant5908 Před rokem +11

      Bob Feller tried to have Ball Four banned. Eventually, I got Dom DiMaggio to talk about it, and he said that a lot of the stuff in the book was probably true but often out-of-context. Dom used to tell the most hilarious stories about Ty Cobb.

    • @jeffking887
      @jeffking887 Před rokem +2

      @@astrobullivant5908 interesting! I looked up some comments from Ty regarding Joe DiMaggio. I would imagine Dom did have some interesting opinions.

    • @PotrzebieConolly
      @PotrzebieConolly Před rokem +3

      @@astrobullivant5908 I wonder how Dom DiMaggio would know what was true and what was out of context for the 1969 Seattle Mariners. How involved was he with that team?

    • @astrobullivant5908
      @astrobullivant5908 Před rokem +5

      @@PotrzebieConolly Dom wasn't involved with the '69 Pilots at all. However, the book, at least certain editions, contained a lot of hearsay about the way Baseball had been for decades.

    • @macofalltrades6396
      @macofalltrades6396 Před rokem +3

      @@PotrzebieConolly They were the Seattle Pilots. They moved in 1970 and became the Milwaukee Brewers.

  • @jimc.goodfellas226
    @jimc.goodfellas226 Před rokem +74

    Man the heyday of Tim Wakefield throwing his little floating knuckler, especially when he first burst onto the scene with the Pirates, was really different time in baseball, but it was always fun watching guys succeed with the knuckler

    • @johnnyrotten9757
      @johnnyrotten9757 Před rokem

      As a Braves fan I despised him in the 92 NLCS🤣

    • @meminustherandomgooglenumbers
      @meminustherandomgooglenumbers Před rokem +5

      I think I remember Wakefield starting a season like 20-2 with the BoSox before losing like ten in a row.

    • @MySundin13
      @MySundin13 Před rokem +3

      Wakefield was a fastball pitcher in Pittsburgh mostly.... wasn't until Boston that he used it FULL time. It's when he had no speed left and had to change his game

    • @CyberchaoX
      @CyberchaoX Před rokem +1

      Yeah, the Red Sox became very welcoming of knucklers after Wake's success. In the late 00's, they had a prospect at AAA that threw the knuckler named Charlie Zink; he ended up coming up for a single major league appearance, a start at Fenway against the Rangers. It ended up being a legendary game, though not really for Zink's performance: the Red Sox spotted him _10 runs in the first inning,_ but he ran into trouble in the fifth inning and was unable to pitch the requisite 5 innings for a win...not that the Sox' bullpen stopped the bleeding well enough to have gotten him the decision anyway. Despite leading 10-0 after one inning and 12-2 after three, the Sox trailed 16-14 at the seventh-inning stretch before rallying in the eighth inning for a 19-17 win.

    • @TheGillenium
      @TheGillenium Před rokem +2

      @@CyberchaoX I was at the game. It was against the rangers, papi hit two home runs in the first inning if I remember correctly. Then they traded blows for 9 innings until youkilis put it away with a bomb.

  • @Wolfeson28
    @Wolfeson28 Před rokem +88

    I think you hit on a lot of the important points for why the pitch is almost extinct in MLB. I think some other reasons go along with those. In addition to being a very hard pitch to throw, there's very little margin for error with it before it becomes a meatball (as you said), and most knuckleballers are almost *exclusively* knuckleballers. So if they don't have the feel for their knuckleball in a particular game, there's very little else they can mix in to work through it.
    Plus, the whole concept of the knuckleball is swimming against the two biggest currents in modern pitching orthodoxy. Everyone nowadays focuses on high velocity and high spin rate...and the knuckleball intentionally minimizes both of those.

    • @martytu20
      @martytu20 Před rokem +1

      Using rapsodo and edgertronics can work the other way to record the grip that gives you the least amount of spin. The other thing is that it’s more acceptable for a starter to pitch 5 innings and leave before going through the order a third time.

    • @prilljazzatlanta5070
      @prilljazzatlanta5070 Před rokem

      Right. As a Red Sox fan growing up Tim Wakefield always made me nervous when he was on the mound

    • @MrBendylaw
      @MrBendylaw Před rokem +3

      Smoltz used to sneak a knuckler in about once a month, later in his career. I can't say if it was any good or not, but it was sure unexpected. I've always wondered if he had the cojones to float one up there when he was closing.

    • @Madmoody21
      @Madmoody21 Před rokem

      Even the best pushed out knuckleball can end up a meat ball or past the catcher.

    • @MrBendylaw
      @MrBendylaw Před rokem +2

      @@Madmoody21 Well that is what is beautiful about the knuckler; it has it's own say in things. It's a very democratic ball, as opposed to four seam strikeouts, which are fascist.

  • @STARPHASE
    @STARPHASE Před 9 měsíci +4

    This is where video games are great. I'm not a HUGE baseball fan, but enjoy playing the MLB games, and when I do a career as a pitcher, I throw some crazy pitches lol. My current one I've got the Knuckleball, your standard 4 seamer, a screwball, a forkball, and a knuckle curve. When you can choose any pitches you want, and up to 5, why not have fun and make a pitcher with a crazy arsenal?

  • @lucasscott6984
    @lucasscott6984 Před rokem +27

    I have a teammate in college who actually throws a good knuckleball and it's so hard to hit against. It just dances around your barrel as it gets to you

  • @unSelf21
    @unSelf21 Před rokem +13

    I sat behind home plate a section to the right of home plate and watched Tim Wakefield pitch against the Mariners at what was then Safeco Field. It was an absolute pleasure to watch. It was like his pitches would take a quick breath just before home plate and then flutter to the catcher's glove. It defied physics. Damn, it was so cool!

    • @ricky5369
      @ricky5369 Před rokem

      *defined by * physics

    • @unSelf21
      @unSelf21 Před rokem +2

      @@ricky5369 An exaggeration meant to express how odd the ball moved. Not to be taken literally. Obviously, or so I thought.

    • @ricky5369
      @ricky5369 Před rokem +1

      @@unSelf21 I get the expression, I'm pointing out the irony that the pitch is literally meant to exploit physics. I have a physics degree so it's interesting to me.

    • @unSelf21
      @unSelf21 Před rokem +1

      @@ricky5369 Excellent! But all the quantum fluctuations in the Multiverse won't change the fact that you're just being a smug troll.

    • @ricky5369
      @ricky5369 Před rokem +1

      @@unSelf21 wtf are you talking about that's not a thing, and you just didn't get the joke you're taking it the wrong way

  • @jaex9617
    @jaex9617 Před rokem +29

    I really want this back. Besides being effective when thrown well, it makes for some hilarious blooper *and* highlight reels. Truly uncanny, and brings so much fun to the game.

  • @modsquad20
    @modsquad20 Před 8 měsíci +3

    I remember watching Wakefield throw a pitch that was 37 mph. His lead foot only left the ground by a few inches with barely a stride towards the plate. Looked like he playing catch with his kids.

  • @thegadflygang5381
    @thegadflygang5381 Před rokem +53

    This was great, especially the point of pitchers having to change their style due to increasing longevity. My Uncle Bill pitched for the Cardinals for almost 15 years after personally being discovered by Branch Rickey with over 300 games pitched and several 50 FULL seasons in his career.
    Despite throwing an unGodly number of pitches in his career, he did alright because of his early implantation of the " slow ball/breaker, curve and slider. You cant be a fireballer and expect to stay
    Healthy

    • @David-ln5jw
      @David-ln5jw Před rokem +9

      Unless you’re Nolan Ryan

    • @HummBabyBaseball
      @HummBabyBaseball  Před rokem +3

      Thanks!

    • @thegadflygang5381
      @thegadflygang5381 Před rokem +1

      @@David-ln5jw Good point, the old man was built differently although not to take anything away from him because Ryan is the GOAT, by the 70s you already had your middle reliever and closer in place. Nolan pitched something like 40 complete games which is a ton. Guys like my Uncle were pitching that many complete games in a season.
      Beats you up if you are a Bill Sherdel or Grover Alexander on those 1920s Cardinal teams or any of those guys before the 50s

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem +2

      @@David-ln5jw Or Randy Johnson.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před rokem +5

      I’m going to guess your Uncle Bill was either Bill Doak or Bill Sherdel?

  • @user-jd5zt4of8q
    @user-jd5zt4of8q Před rokem +51

    Interestingly the knuckleball has had a true renaissance in cricket of all places...
    Guys like Bhuveneshwar Kumar introduced it into the sport and since then guys like T Natarajan, Arshdeep Singh, Shardul Thakur and Deepak Chahar perfected the art - with Chahar having an 80 MPH knuckleball!

    • @grant5122
      @grant5122 Před rokem +6

      That is very interesting. Maybe the key to bringing back the knuckleball in the MLB is finding cricket knuckleballers willing to tryout for baseball, like the “Million Dollar Arm” pitchers from back in the day

    • @user-jd5zt4of8q
      @user-jd5zt4of8q Před rokem +9

      @@grant5122 I think the knuckleball is just much better suited for cricket...
      In cricket there is muck more room for leeway in accuracy and so the bowler (pitcher) does not get penalised for it, while the mere act of bamboozling batters and not conceding runs is a great thing in cricket that will make you incredibly valuable
      In the same manner by the way almost every major cricket team has a Shohei Ohtani equivalent - with the Kolkata Knight Riders having 4!, while at the ssme time every baseball team has power hitters as good as the best cricket has to offer

    • @w0033944
      @w0033944 Před rokem

      Was going to say the same thing!

    • @vikramkrishnan6414
      @vikramkrishnan6414 Před 10 měsíci

      Posted the same thing elsewhere

    • @archiebellega956
      @archiebellega956 Před 8 měsíci

      In baseball if you want knuckleballer, you don't just grab a knuckleball pitcher, you also grab knuckleball catcher, preferably those that already paired well with said pitcher.
      In crickets there's no catcher, and the punishment for missing the target (whatever it is) is less severe than failing to catch a pitch. Rather the use of knuckleball in cricket might be too low, as the ability to bounce the ball off the ground already give some sense of randomness anyway

  • @phild8095
    @phild8095 Před rokem +71

    It has only been a couple years since MLB had a knuckleballer, they will be back. It's a hard pitch to throw, catch and it requires a certain weather and stitching on the balls to be truly effective.
    Someone in the front office will realize that a knuckleballer can keep your bullpen on the bench for a night, figure out that even 15 appearances a year would be worth the money. But you can't put the guy in a 4 day rotation, because that will put him in games that the weather isn't right.
    Favorite baseball book, Ball Four by knuckleballer Jim Bouton.

    • @warlordofbritannia
      @warlordofbritannia Před rokem

      100% agree with everything you said

    • @hoanpham4545
      @hoanpham4545 Před rokem

      Part of you is right but teams aren't really carrying long relievers anymore. Not the classic swing-arm in the bullpen. That's considered a waste of a spot plus most of your bench are pitchers anyways.

    • @samiam619
      @samiam619 Před rokem +1

      Yes! Ball Four destroyed the Yankees myth.

    • @tonypc5962
      @tonypc5962 Před rokem +1

      Phil Neikro was my favorite Brave of all time (along with Hank Aaron). Yes, he had a lot of walks (3rd all time, but almost a thousand behind Nolan Ryan), but won over 300 games! Maybe take a young (minor league) pitcher with a high 80s fastball who'd probably never make the big leagues and start teaching him the pitch as long as he has the patience to stick with it.

    • @richardturner8630
      @richardturner8630 Před rokem

      Will it even work in a dome?

  • @phildicks4721
    @phildicks4721 Před rokem +6

    Jim Bouton wrote in Ball Four that he talked to Joe Niekro about the knuckleball and why Niekro would throw a fastball instead. Niekro said if his arm felt too strong he'd throw a fastball to tire his arm out. If his arm was too strong then he said his knuckleball wasn't that good.

  • @MartinMcCauslin
    @MartinMcCauslin Před 9 měsíci +2

    Growing up as a Ranger fan I loved Charlie Hough and I knew about the Niekro brothers so I just figured the knuckle ball was going to be a part of baseball forever. It was fun while it lasted...

  • @rogerballoujr.6244
    @rogerballoujr.6244 Před rokem +6

    I play Out of the Park Baseball and whenever I see a Knuckleball pitcher spawn I snag them up on the spot. It is such an interesting pitch and as a Red Sox fan back when Tim Wakefield was part of the team win or lose, vying for a no hitter or getting absolutely lit up unique pitchers like him, Steven Wright, Bob Stanley (with his Palmball) or similar junk ball pitchers always made the game interesting back then.

  • @kennethcox421
    @kennethcox421 Před rokem +5

    After I read RA Dickey's autobiography, "Whenever I Windup" he became my favorite major leaguer of all time. I then watched a documentary about the knuckleball and Tim Wakefield and Charley Hough joined Dickey at the top of my list. These are the ones I have watched the most. The Niekro brothers, Joe and Phil, are also on the top of my list. I hadn't thought of the others and hadn't really followed them. These men were amazing to me. Thank you.

    • @ogvektor
      @ogvektor Před rokem +1

      what documentary was it?

    • @kennethcox421
      @kennethcox421 Před rokem

      @@ogvektor I first saw it on Primer or Roku. When I tried to find it on those streaming apps says it isn't available but here is a CZcams link: czcams.com/video/_zXC_TReY1U/video.html. CZcamsr: knuckleball! 2Scoop@2scoop831 has it. Hopefully you enjoy it as much as I did. Thank you!

  • @edm240b9
    @edm240b9 Před rokem +16

    Growing up with the Red Sox on TV, Tim Wakefield was always a pitcher I didn’t know how to feel about on the mound. Some nights he had his stuff, other nights he was bombed harder than the Somme. Not only that, but it also meant Jason Varitek was on the bench since Doug Maribelli was Wakefield’s catcher as Varitek has trouble with knuckleballs.
    That said, Sox Nation has a soft spot in their hearts for Tim Wakefield. Towards the end of his career, he actually was good enough to be elected into an All Star Game. Unfortunately, he didn’t pitch; which I found disappointing, I wanted to see a bunch of All Stars potentially struggle against Wakefield’s knuckleball.

    • @ChipJohnson
      @ChipJohnson Před rokem

      Love me some Tim Wakefield. I tried to learn how to throw the knuckleball because of him, but because it was the few days of the internet, and no one knew how to actually throw it, I never added it to my pitches.
      Then I started playing slow-pitch softball, and I've been throwing it for 2 years. Same idea, and it's still a work in progress, but when it works...oh boy.

    • @johnlafleur8447
      @johnlafleur8447 Před rokem

      It got really stressful when the Sox made Wake the closer for a short period of time.

    • @SeanCMonahan
      @SeanCMonahan Před rokem

      I think I remember years later they re-signed the by that point retired Mirabelli in an emergency (maybe injuries?). He had to fly across country the same day to catch Wake.
      I might be completely misremembering something though.

    • @edm240b9
      @edm240b9 Před rokem

      @@SeanCMonahan Maribelli was on the Padres for a short while, but then the Red Sox resigned him in 2006(?) and he was literally rushed to the game. I believe the back up made to catch Wake that day was injured, but I could be forgetting some detail.

    • @ChipJohnson
      @ChipJohnson Před rokem +3

      @@SeanCMonahan You're not too far off. Mirabelli had left in free agency to the Padres, but his replacement, Josh Bard, couldn't catch a knuckleball, either. Theo traded for Doug, flew him cross-country where they landed 12 minutes before gametime after the pilot had cleared airspace on the flight path. A police escort to the field was next, with Mirabelli changing in the vehicle on the way to Fenway.

  • @DPK365
    @DPK365 Před rokem +10

    Good video...I liked the impersonations you did lol. I do like the knuckleball and I hope someone can bring it back....it's a fun pitch.

  • @patrickkanas3874
    @patrickkanas3874 Před rokem +6

    I saw a documentary about the knuckleball where R.A. Dickey got shelled on opening day, and it was determined that his knuckler wasn't working because he had a broken nail, which caused the ball to spin too much. I've also heard that it's an easy pitch to steal a base off of because of how slow it is.

  • @waterwater111
    @waterwater111 Před rokem +3

    Good news - after being let go by Chicago, Jannis signed with the High Point Rockers of the Atlantic League and did well posting a 2.72 ERA in 39.2 innings in the regular season. In the playoffs he had one bad outing, giving up 7 runs in 5 innings. But he also had a solid one in the championship series, giving up one run in 6 innings. Great video, long live the Knuckleball!

  • @bartbujanda7297
    @bartbujanda7297 Před rokem +7

    I used to watch Tim Wakefield all the time, and I would drive around w/ a baseball in my hand, and making the Wakefield knuckled grip. I modeled my delivery after him and everything. Played in adult leagues, served up some home runs before I learned how to use it right. The pitch made me obsessed with baseball, and now I love to make the ball flutter. it’s like a freak accident, and one of the greatest feelings. Also, the video didn’t mention Dennis Springer, Steve Sparks, and Charlie Haeger!!

    • @tomgervat578
      @tomgervat578 Před 9 měsíci

      Charlie Haeger. I had high hopes for him.

  • @phildicks4721
    @phildicks4721 Před rokem +6

    One of the enjoyable stories in Ball Four was Jim Bouton trying to talk catchers to catch his knuckleball in the bullpen.

  • @aguynamedguy309
    @aguynamedguy309 Před rokem

    Great video. I honestly didn't know about the Heir to the Neikro line trying to come back as a knuckleballer.

  • @meminustherandomgooglenumbers

    Even though i was never a huge baseball fan, I used to watch Charlie Hough and Tim Wakefield whenever I found a chance, just because the knuckler is so rare. Saw the Niekro bros pitch a few times too, but was too young to understand what I was seeing.

  • @bishopaz
    @bishopaz Před rokem +5

    I remember watching Wilhelm warm up for the Dodgers in 1971, we were sitting next to the bullpen. He had such an easy motion. To me he threw pretty hard. He was 48 years old.

  • @nordattack
    @nordattack Před rokem +2

    I was a knuckler in a local adult league. I threw it pretty slow. I remember the looks on the batters faces when I first threw it. They were like "wtf" and actually were laughing or smiling at how slow it was. But when they couldn't hit it they quickly got serious. Great video and history of the pitch. Thank you.

  • @chriscox3709
    @chriscox3709 Před rokem

    Good video. I learned a little bit about baseball. I remember Phil Niekro being a well known knuckle baller from when I was a kid and I had the Topps card in the video. Go Cubs Go!!!

  • @ldo1308
    @ldo1308 Před rokem +8

    I experimented with a knuckle ball, in my teens. Sometimes I could knuckle one pretty good, but not very consistently. I had trouble throwing a successful one multiple times in a row. Ended up scrapping it.

    • @techvape2671
      @techvape2671 Před rokem

      I too used to throw the knuckles ball in my teens. I had alot of success with a 3 finger knuckles, that I used as a 3rd strike pitch. I ❤️ that pitch!

    • @webventures
      @webventures Před rokem

      @@techvape2671 I only threw my knuckler when nobody was on base.

  • @akhnatenra6603
    @akhnatenra6603 Před rokem +4

    The last knuckle ball I remember was the one that Reggie Jackson put deep center field in Yankee Stadium to Charlie Hough in is last at bat of the 1977 World Series.

  • @harryparsons2750
    @harryparsons2750 Před rokem

    It was awesome to get to go to Fenway Park and watch Tim Wakefield pitch. It seemed like every game I went to he was the starter. Saw some great performances from him. One of my favorite Red Sox players ever. a real stand up dude too

  • @oscarg6260
    @oscarg6260 Před rokem

    Well, it wasn’t a short video but it was very informative!! Excellent video!!!
    Well done!!!! Thank you

  • @lawrencemarocco8197
    @lawrencemarocco8197 Před rokem +57

    Hoyt Wilhelm, one of the great knuckleballers, baffled batter for many years.
    One time, Norman Cash of the Tigers went to bat against Hoyt Wilhelm with a table leg instead of a bat. He said it would be just as effective.
    Another Tiger player, Charlie Maxwell, developed a reputation for hitting home runs on Sundays. He hit a dinger off Hoyt one Sunday and was asked how he managed to do it. He said, "I just closed my eyes, counted three, and swung."
    Another story, possibly an urban legend, was that in spring training, the pitching coach send a minor league catcher out to catch some warm-up pitches. As he walked to the plate, the coach yelled out, "Wait, you forgot you mask." The kid said, "What do I need a mask for? I'm just going to catch some warm-ups." When he revived on the trainer's table he said, "I don't get it. The pitch was too high, I reached for it, and it hit me in the face."
    Gus Triandos was Wilhelm's catcher In Baltimore. Tired of all the passed balls he was getting charged with he worked with Wilson Sporting Goods and came up with the "elephant" mitt which was almost twice the circumference of a standard catcher's mitt.

    • @DrVonNostrand
      @DrVonNostrand Před rokem +5

      All fake stories but thanks anyway

    • @davebodack9946
      @davebodack9946 Před rokem +7

      Not to be annoying but Norm Cash actually went to the plate with a table leg against Nolan Ryan, who had a slightly different pitching style than Hoyt Wilhelm

    • @bobmalack481
      @bobmalack481 Před rokem +1

      No one called Norm Cash 'Norman' not even play by play commentators. Robert at 67.

    • @chuckinhouston9952
      @chuckinhouston9952 Před rokem

      Great stories. I remember Charlie “Paw Paw” Maxwell and his Sunday punch.

    • @chuckinhouston9952
      @chuckinhouston9952 Před rokem

      @@DrVonNostrand Wrong, son. The stories are real. I remember them all.

  • @sbdsoill
    @sbdsoill Před rokem +6

    ive been to around 14 tim wakefield starts in my childhood. i was always disappointed when i saw him over josh beckett, but i never witnessed a loss with tim on the bump. and having paid bookoo bucks to watch an ace lose, its a lot more satisfying to witness a W from whomever throws it

  • @ayosoupah7
    @ayosoupah7 Před rokem

    This chanel brings me so much closer to baseball man i love it so much knowledge

  • @JORLANDO93
    @JORLANDO93 Před rokem

    Used to practice throwing a knuckle ball all the time in little league. Kept at it as I got older, ended up throwing knuckles in high school for strikes. More fun than a curve!
    Was throwing with my nephew a few months ago and got to show him a couple. Gotta love the game

  • @longlakeshore
    @longlakeshore Před rokem +3

    In the 1970s the Cincinnati Reds thought of dealing for Phil Niekro from the Braves until Johnny Bench warned them they'd need to trade for a new catcher as well! Bench didn't want to lose his status as a Gold Glove catcher. Too many wild pitches from knuckleballers are tallied as past balls which are charged as errors to catchers.

  • @DarthRadical
    @DarthRadical Před rokem +4

    When strikes/balls start being called electronically (they're working on it) the knuckleball will be back. It's the pitch most commonly miscalled as a ball when it's really a strike, so it would have a huge benefit to knuckleballers.

  • @do_yohomework
    @do_yohomework Před rokem

    Underrated baseball CZcams channel . Do more deep dives!

  • @johntrek187
    @johntrek187 Před 7 měsíci

    Tim Wakefield is loved here in beantown. So many great memories watching him dominate at Fenway. From our came so close years to our world series years he was great.

  • @richardadams4928
    @richardadams4928 Před rokem +8

    In my entire lifetime, I pitched in ONE pickup baseball game, and I threw only knucklers and laughably slow"fastballs" as an occasional change of pace. The first knuckler I threw, and most of them throughout the game, actually WORKED. It was a fun day. Hilarious to watch hitters hungrily gear up to try and CRUSH such a tantalizingly slow pitch, only to end up chopping air....😆😆

    • @ayo9057
      @ayo9057 Před rokem

      You can’t throw a knuckleball. 🤡

  • @angc214
    @angc214 Před rokem +5

    Steve Sparks was a knuckleballer for Detroit in the 2000's. He did pretty well.

  • @agwbcfjc2
    @agwbcfjc2 Před rokem

    Very informative and entertaining video. Thank you.

  • @jamesdecker4172
    @jamesdecker4172 Před rokem

    Ive been waiting since the first day of your screwball video for a knuckleball video! Gotta love the knuckleballers! Great video Erik!

  • @Klingonmastr
    @Klingonmastr Před rokem +5

    With slow-pitch softball I'm always reminded that the knuckleball is a much more difficult pitch than something like a curve ball or change up. It's real too bad we don't see more MLB players currently doing the knuckleball.

  • @gwynwellliver4489
    @gwynwellliver4489 Před rokem +5

    Love Wake and Tek together! Wish they could find another duo like them. Great to see Tek in the dugout these days and Wake on NESN.

  • @besticudcumupwith202
    @besticudcumupwith202 Před rokem +1

    ...I'd like to see a series where you describe all the pitchs. Slider, curve, etc.
    It's cool seeing it from behind the plate in slow motion.

  • @theNfl_Esq
    @theNfl_Esq Před 8 měsíci

    Baseball is the most fascinating of all the big sports. Angles, off speed, spin, lefty, screwball, etc. just amazing

  • @Brian-nw2bn
    @Brian-nw2bn Před rokem +7

    If Jamie Moyer had ever figured out the knuckle ball he’d still be pitching today lol.

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem +1

      Bartolo Colón too.

  • @BST-lm4po
    @BST-lm4po Před rokem +6

    “I work for three weeks to get my swing down pat and Phil (Niekro) messes it up in one night,” said Pete Rose. “Trying to hit that thing is a miserable way to make a living.”

  • @MichaelFrederickPhoto

    Charlie’s son is a good buddy of mine, to hear the baseball stories is something a sports guys dream. My fav is while playing with ChiSox, Bo Jackson was rehabbing his new hip. His “rehab weight” on the leg press was my buddy’s max weight. Said he was the strongest man he ever saw.

  • @panagenesis2695
    @panagenesis2695 Před 9 měsíci

    Great video & background music!👍

  • @jennyvega8
    @jennyvega8 Před rokem +2

    loving the history of the knuckleball!

  • @JeffreyMoon1974
    @JeffreyMoon1974 Před rokem +4

    This was a VERY good documentary on the pitch, its history, and why it seems to be going the way of the dodo. Being a Red Sox fan for 40 years, I saw more than my share of Tim Wakefield starts on television and in person. On the nights the ball danced just right, you couldn't hit that pitch with an oversized tennis racket. Of course, there were more than a few times that it didn't fool batters and it turned ugly fast. There was actually one game against the Tigers in Detroit in which he gave up SIX home runs, yet he still managed to earn the win. Believe it or not, Wakefield is tied with Roger Clemens for the most wins by a Red Sox pitcher (192), and he even took a turn for part of one season as a closer. I will say that there is still room in baseball for the pitch, but it's unlikely that you'll find a pitcher who exclusively throws the knuckleball, and even then, it cannot be his primary weapon.

  • @ronstout6013
    @ronstout6013 Před 9 měsíci

    Excellent Video!

  • @VianoMusicAcademy
    @VianoMusicAcademy Před rokem

    Great video! Also, the music is awesome. What’s the piece?

  • @milehigh6ix505
    @milehigh6ix505 Před rokem +10

    The only way someone's throwing a knuckleball if it's a position player pitching

    • @D0NKY
      @D0NKY Před rokem +4

      We need some utility fielder to randomly come into a blowout game and throw 4 scoreless with a knuckleball and end up making millions in the rotation.

  • @responder2246
    @responder2246 Před rokem +5

    Believe it or not. I started throwing a knuckleball around age 8. By 14. I was pulled from the JV team to the varsity to start against certain teams. My fastball couldn't break a window pane. But my curve and a natural cut/slider would eat up a right handed batter. My knuckle ball flustered batters with a 1-2 or 2-2 count. Funniest knuckleball was one that hit a batter in the back and bounced up an hit his bat for a foul tip strike (in batters box). lol The scariest. Pitching the second game of a double header. Bases loaded, count 2-2, 1 out. Knuckleball did not break. Just floated calmly until the beast at the plate launched it like a rocket straight away centerfield. It may still be flying around out there. That was 35 years ago. lol Great video.

  • @braviafeed
    @braviafeed Před rokem

    Great video!!

  • @alexanderdukeler3948
    @alexanderdukeler3948 Před měsícem

    How about doing a video on the ephus pitch? When I was a kid growing up in the Bronx in the late 60s and early 70s, the Yankees had a lefty reliever by the name of Steve Hamilton. I would get excited when he’d come on to pitch in anticipation of him throwing his version of the ephus, the “folly floater”.

  • @lostbuffalo196
    @lostbuffalo196 Před rokem +4

    Very interesting indeed. Good job. I can't believe that one guy said it was a "trick" pitch and should be banned. It's a thrown ball like all other pitches.

  • @edpottinger849
    @edpottinger849 Před rokem +3

    The reason that you dont see the knuckleball as much is because they shrunk the strike zone.They did that in the early nineties or late eighties.The strike zone is about 1.5 to 2 feet smaller now then what it was when the knuckleball was used quite a bit.Some of the longest pitching careers were knuckballers in the sixties and early 70s in particular.Its a hitter's game now and they dont call the highstrikes anymore.

    • @SimonFoster23111971
      @SimonFoster23111971 Před rokem

      They didn't shrink the zone by 2 feet. Guys like Maddux used to try to pitch further and further outside - and knew that to make it look like a strike they'd have to keep the ball low.

    • @edpottinger849
      @edpottinger849 Před rokem

      @@SimonFoster23111971 Yes they did the zone used to be bigger,they shrunk it to have more runs and not so boring games.I think it was late eighties when they did that.
      Too many one nothing scores.The league thought it best.Thats why they get football scores some time.

  • @markaruski
    @markaruski Před 9 měsíci +1

    Fun and interesting video! Bring back the knuckleball, variety is the spice of life!

  • @amberpaigejames9054
    @amberpaigejames9054 Před rokem

    Perfect impersonation of Gene at 1:27 He was so cantankerous! lol Especially when he was referring to the way he threw knuckleballs! Classic Gene

  • @azathoth0820
    @azathoth0820 Před rokem +144

    Which is why baseball is turning quite boring because everything will be so generic, almost every pitcher has the fastball as their main pitch, everyone looks the same and has the same stuff, no one is original in any aspect. Hitting is also the same, all hitters try to hit home runs, there's no contact hitters anymore and everybody just strikes out or hits home runs. No stolen bases, no sac bunts, no bunt hits. The only strategy is to hit the ball as hard as they can and that's it.

    • @ussgordoncaptain
      @ussgordoncaptain Před rokem +15

      The sad thing is that the 4 seam fastball is statisically the worst pitch in baseball. The best pitch in baseball is the Splitter, then the slider, then curveball.
      maybe a pitcher needs to come along that just pitches breaking balls as his primary pitch type or soemthing

    • @SamtheBravesFan
      @SamtheBravesFan Před rokem

      So basically it's the 1950s all over again. Fine by me. It's proven stolen bases have minimal benefit, they're honestly just there for entertainment purposes.

    • @mrd1433
      @mrd1433 Před rokem

      The Royals went to the World Series in 2014 and 2015 and won in 2015 with contact hitters and then lost the core of their line up to free agency in 2016. Freakin Scott Boras.

    • @rickmontgomery3037
      @rickmontgomery3037 Před rokem +12

      You're exactly right, I couldn't have said it any better. Then you add in all this analytic stuff that's been going on and it just takes the fun out of it for me and makes the game even more boring -- and now technical -- than you mentioned, as if the lack of fundamentals isn't bad enough. Call me old school, defiant, resistant, whatever, but when a guy hits a baseball I don't want to have to think about it in terms of exit velocity, angle of the flight path, how many gazillion feet (what's next, inches too?) it went, how fast the pitch came in, angle of the bat swing, you name it. I don't want to always have to associate numbers, metrics, stats, blah blah with every instance of a ball leaving someone's hand and either hitting the bat or a glove, no matter whether it's a pitch, an attempted stolen base (wow, what's that?!), or a throw into the infield from the outfield. Again, it just makes things too boring and technical for me in that regard...I don't want to have to "think" that hard just to watch a ball game. I'd rather "watch" it instead and just leave it at that, which the way this game has gone in recent years -- and continues to go -- is becoming tougher to do.

    • @joetrapp9187
      @joetrapp9187 Před rokem +7

      Pretty much exactly what I was writing, so I'll just cut and paste here.
      Yes, it's gone. The screwball, palm ball, roundhouse curve, fork ball, and a bunch of other pitches are endangered. So are sidewinders, and junk ball, and pitch-to-contact pitchers. All pitchers now throw a cutter and a change, and all the hitters look like lumberjacks who work the count to strikeout, walk, or hit a home run. No more base stealers, no more Rod Carew or even Wade Boggs hitters. No more characters. Remember Mark Fidrych? All these guys are camped together from a young age and they all know each other by the time they are in the Major League. No more tryouts. No more Dan Driessens or Ron LeFlores. Baseball has lost much of it's texture going for a bland sameness.

  • @DMacLean15
    @DMacLean15 Před rokem +3

    The knuckleball has really become a lost art in baseball. As a knuckleball pitcher my entire life, I looked up to guys like Tim Wakefield, R.A. Dickey, etc. and knowing that there aren’t any of them left (aside from those who throw a knuckle curve) really saddens me!

  • @ddeboy002
    @ddeboy002 Před rokem +1

    I can still throw a great one at 52yrs old. Everyone hated me because no one-not even me- knew where the ball would go-but it's so awesome to watch. We nicknamed it the laughing pitch.

  • @bigjj974
    @bigjj974 Před 9 měsíci

    Great video Thank You

  • @bobsala7780
    @bobsala7780 Před rokem +3

    I’ll expand upon the statement that there is a stigma associated with throwing the knuckleball. In the movie Bull Durham, pitcher Nuke LaLoosh said that he wouldn’t throw a curveball because he wanted to “announce my presence with authority.” I’m sure that attitude still persists today, especially among younger pitchers. No pitcher is able to announce their presence with authority by throwing a knuckleball.

    • @keitharnoldjohnson
      @keitharnoldjohnson Před rokem

      I pitched as high as Double A. I don't remember any pitcher in college or after that didn't try to throw the knuckleball. The guys that weren't going to make it tried harder (and side-arm, split-finger, circle change, whatever). There's no stigma, it's just damn hard. Anyone can throw it, almost no one can pitch with it effectively. They either can't control it or it doesn't move.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 Před rokem

      I'm sure we appreciate you expanding on the topic based on a movie you once saw.

  • @markantony1980
    @markantony1980 Před rokem +3

    One of my favorite old time baseball quotes comes from a veteran catcher (whose name I can't remember) who was asked how to catch a knuckleball. He replied, "You wait for it to stop rolling then walk over and pick it up."

  • @Beargizmo3
    @Beargizmo3 Před 9 měsíci

    In one of his books Roger Angell devoted a chapter to the physics of the knuckleball. Great reading

  • @pauldiaco3817
    @pauldiaco3817 Před rokem

    Bobby Tiefenauer. Pitched between '52 and '68. Pitched for 6 teams, but I remember him for his stint with the Braves.

  • @brendanterrell9817
    @brendanterrell9817 Před rokem +3

    Zach Greinke had a nasty knuckle ball with the dbacks but he didn’t use it much

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc Před rokem

      He really didn't need to, he had that semi-Eephus "slow curve" to mess with a hitter's timing, and he could throw it for strikes.

  • @thecaliokieconnexion
    @thecaliokieconnexion Před rokem +8

    I loved this story of the knuckleball! Very interesting! I personally think having as many different pitches as we can helps keep baseball fun and interesting. It’s shame it currently seems to be dying/to have died out. This analytical age of baseball is usually downer for me. Computers and conformity. No thanks! Bring back the human elements, variety and creativity please! Please Mr. Baseball… ! ( this for the commissioner? For the baseball gods? But…I am afraid there is maybe no coming back.😢). Thank you Mr. Hummbaby Baseball for the great content❣️❤️⚾️ God Bless!

  • @SuperHornet1981
    @SuperHornet1981 Před 16 dny

    It was somewhere in the mid-70s that Joe Garigiola, one of the announcers on Monday Night Baseball, (Monday and Saturday afternoon were the only televised games in the week) talked about some major league catcher’s description of the knuckleball--“It gets to within 4 feet of home plate and drops like a quarter in a pay phone!”

  • @gusswier3952
    @gusswier3952 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I learned to pitch this from my actual knuckles 30 years ago. Loved this pitch.

  • @macofalltrades6396
    @macofalltrades6396 Před rokem +3

    4:10 Nolan Ryan pitched 332 innings in 1973 and was one of the first pitchers (along with Steve Carlton) to go all-in on strength training to keep in shape.
    Wilbur Wood threw 40 more innings in 1972 despite being, to put it indelicately, fat.
    Knuckleballers are typically pitchers who have lost the ability to overpower hitters. Managers and GMs will always prefer power pitchers, so the guys who lose that skill don't often get the chance to transition to the knuckler. Additionally, it's difficult to catch, and fairly easy to steal against. As a result, most of the teams who used knuckleballers were bad teams.
    Phil Niekro was statistically the best pitcher in the NL three times in the 1970s, but the Braves were so terrible that (1) he alone couldn't pull them up, (2) they shared a division with both the Big Red Machine and the Dodgers: in 1974, the Braves had the same record as NL East champion Pittsburgh, yet finished ten games behind Cincinnati - who, in turn, finished ten MORE games behind LA. Finally, (3) he ended up pitching a ton of complete games that he lost. One season he went 21-20; in another he was 19-18. Between 1977 and 1979, he pitched 1,007 innings and threw over 60 complete games. This is another reason bad teams used to employ knuckleballers: as staff savers, since usually, teams that employ those guys don't generally have a lot of good pitching otherwise.
    Wilbur Wood was similar, pitching for the White Sox in the same era.
    Hough went to World Series in LA in 1974, 1977 and 1978, but those teams were so good that he was only a marginal contributor in the postseason. I don't recall that he was ever on any other notable teams, and he never made any postseason appearances after 1978, so it's safe to say that the one good team he played for kept him pretty far down the depth chart.

  • @gerrypellissier9551
    @gerrypellissier9551 Před rokem +4

    Young pitchers should at least have the knuckler in their arsenal. Every knuckleballer had a long career.

    • @MrBendylaw
      @MrBendylaw Před rokem

      If it were that easy....

    • @TheGodYouWishYouKnew
      @TheGodYouWishYouKnew Před rokem

      There’s no such thing. You’re either a knuckleball pitcher or you aren’t.

    • @gerrypellissier9551
      @gerrypellissier9551 Před rokem

      @@TheGodYouWishYouKnew You have to be able to throw more than 1 pitch to succeed in the show.

    • @TheGodYouWishYouKnew
      @TheGodYouWishYouKnew Před rokem

      @@gerrypellissier9551 You’re either a knuckleball pitcher or you aren’t. A knuckleball isn’t part of a repertoire. This isn’t a video game.

    • @gerrypellissier9551
      @gerrypellissier9551 Před rokem

      @@TheGodYouWishYouKnew You like repeating yourself don't you ?

  • @mattberg6816
    @mattberg6816 Před rokem

    Great video. Thanks

  • @ltmaniac
    @ltmaniac Před rokem

    Cool video. One thing to add in the video would be from the catchers perspective. You mentioned that the KB leads to many passed balls and wild pitches, which would be reasons why catchers would hate trying to catch them. It takes a certain type of player to catch a Knuckleballer.
    It would take a lot of time for a KBer to develop the pitch as well as a catcher to get experience catching them.

    • @kenkur27
      @kenkur27 Před rokem

      I remember a lot of the knuckleballers had their 'specialist' catchers using larger than normal mitts.

  • @user6008
    @user6008 Před rokem +11

    If analytics were truly stat based, then the knuckleball would have a valued place in the game today. I'm talking about innings, as in have a back of the rotation fifth starter who more often than not, could give his team a solid six, seven or more innings every fifth day. Thereby taking stress off the bullpen, lessening innings for those late inning flame throwers, while giving a big league team 35 starts and somewhere between 225 to 250 innings. Giving said team an actual statistically driven numerical advantage.
    Unfortunately these calculator crazy, suit wearing, self important ego driven children can't see the forest for the tree's anymore. But then again the American education system has fallen apart, and baseball is merely evidencing this reality.

    • @jakestine4753
      @jakestine4753 Před rokem +3

      This was the Tim Wakefield role. He was a 4th/5th starter in the rotation and was usually able to give the whole bullpen a rest on a good day. Sometimes he'd get shelled, and pretty much he'd just stay in the game and keep throwing that knuckler. You didn't have to worry much that he'd start trying to force anything or hurt himself. A knuckleball is a knuckleball, and pretty much you always try to throw it down the middle of the plate, not too hard, and not too soft, and hope for the hitter to gas on it.
      Watching Wakefield strike guys out from time to time on 67mph pitches was pretty great entertainment.

    • @mrmacross
      @mrmacross Před rokem

      I sort of see the knuckleball as something players resort to when nothing else really works for them. There've been a handful of good knuckleballers like Wakefield and Dickey, but usually they're mid- to back-of-the-rotation guys. With their low K-rates and high BB and HR rates, these guys aren't typically going to be your ace (even with Dickey's Cy Young award, it was his only All-Star season, and Wakefield also only had one). You're generally sacrificing high-end performance for the benefit of being able to throw more innings while being serviceable at worst, good (but not great) at best. As far as prospects go, no great prospect is going to be a primary knuckleballer.
      On the other hand, if you are having a hard time finding a reliable 4th or 5th starter and you don't have the bullpen depth to work with openers and long middle relievers, I don't see why you couldn't go with a knuckleballer. So I think it's mostly that nobody works on it at an early stage of development because it's utility is generally capped and everyone is striving to be the best. And with extended bullpens, innings-eating starters are less valuable than ever, while low K/high BB/high HR pitchers are not valuable in high leverage situations.

    • @memeteam2692
      @memeteam2692 Před rokem

      @@mrmacross You mentioned that players become knuckleball pitchers as last resorts for their careers but forgot to go in depth, like how Dickey failed as a normal pitcher and Wakefield as a position player

    • @tomf5823
      @tomf5823 Před rokem

      there have always been very few knuckleballers. analytics aren't keeping them out of baseball.

    • @cobbler88
      @cobbler88 Před rokem

      You're going to be REALLY disappointed if you ever bother to actually look up the stats posted by a guy like Wakefield, which do not support your assertions. Neither does the thought that going 6 innings per start is saving your bullpen. Even non-idiot managers will still go through at least two arms after that.

  • @OneSliceNation
    @OneSliceNation Před rokem +1

    Running into this video made me remember out of nowhere a dream I had last night about how I was throwing a knuckle ball.... so weird

  • @presto111man
    @presto111man Před rokem +1

    You left off Jim Bouton, who made a great comeback in the late 70's after being out of baseball and then developing the knuckler. My neighbor, who played JC baseball for a natl champion team, was an infielder but he had the best knuckler I have ever seen. No one could hit it, but the coach was reluctant to let him use it due to its gimmicky reputation. That guy could throw it two feet off the ground and it would suddenly jump up, it was amazing.

  • @russs7574
    @russs7574 Před rokem +1

    I am old enough that I got to see Phil Niekro (And Joe, too...although I also remember Brother Joe in his pre-knuckler days) in his prime, and also Hoyt Wilhelm toward the end of his career. (Also, being a Pirates fan, I used to watch a young Tim Wakefield, before his Red Sox days.) Niekro's ball would dart and break all over the place, while Wilhelm's would seem to flutter on the way in before it "decided" which way to break. They were effective back then, when making contact with the ball was something batter tried to do as much as possible.
    Can you imagine how effective a good knuckleball pitcher would be now, when all that batters care about is launch angle and exit velocity, and actually making contact is considered a secondary skill? Let's face it, these days, an average of .235 is deemed acceptable if you hit 25 or more HR. If Niekro could have face these "Analytics Divas" his whole career, he might have broken Cy Young's record.
    What used to blow my mind was that a few times a game, these guys would throw a ball that would break 2 or even 3 times on the way to the plate. (Not an optical illusion. Super slo-mo proved the existence of the phenomenon.) It was like they were playing the baseball game on the old Atari 2600, where you could control the ball with the joystick all the way into the batter.
    I really think that what pretty much drove the knuckleballer out of existence was the utter incompetence of home plate umpires in calling balls and strikes.
    Willie Stargell had one of the best descriptions of a knuckleball..."Throwing a knuckleball for a strike is like throwing a butterfly with hiccups across the street into your neighbor's mailbox." And Rick Monday said that Niekro's knuckler "actually giggles at you as it goes by."

  • @dannymac6368
    @dannymac6368 Před rokem

    I’ve got three different knuckleballs with distinct grips.
    Used my first knuckles for all three pitches: Half to 3/4ths a rotation @ 82 mph with two, one to two rotations @ 78 mph with three, zero to one rotation @ 68 mph with all four.
    First one is most like a knuckle slider, second a knuckle curve/change, and the last one a true knuckleball.
    Rotational consistency was tightest with two, but the amount of movement was greatest with all four. The misses with four were so painful though.

  • @BrisLS1
    @BrisLS1 Před rokem

    Fascinating! I never knew all this about the knuckle. Seems like a risky proposition, to slow the ball down, and then risk it just floating straight over the plate .

  • @dennispearson9287
    @dennispearson9287 Před rokem +1

    This Is A Great Mini Documentary !!..Hats Off To The Research Invested To Create This Masterpiece !!..

  • @olathestanwalker6717
    @olathestanwalker6717 Před rokem +2

    The White Sox had 3 knuckleball pitchers on the staff at one time in the mid to late '60's; Eddie Fisher, Wilbur Wood, and Hoyt Wilhelm. Wilbur won 20+ games four years in a row and Hoyt is in the HOF. White Sox pretty much sucked, but loved watching these guys pitch and seeing the frustration of the opposing hitters. In this era of radar gun flash, a knuckleball is going to be a tough sell, but some player who has a mediocre fast ball and the dedication to master the knuckleball will show up on the scene and make some noise. I might be weird, but the knuckleball is what makes baseball the great sport that it is. Great video., thanks.

  • @mathuff5
    @mathuff5 Před rokem +2

    Great video on the knuckleball! One thing I don't hear mentioned is the effect of throwing off hitters' rhythm and timing when facing a knuckleball pitcher. Hitting is all about rhythm and timing. It's not so hard to hit a 95mph fastball if you see it every single day. But sprinkle in a starter (or reliever) that throws a knuckleball at 60mph, over a 4-game series, then there may be some problems. How do hitters adjust - not just for the knuckleball pitcher that day, but also for when they go back to facing conventional pitching? I think it can throw them off, on both accounts.

  • @jamiecosgrove1950
    @jamiecosgrove1950 Před 10 měsíci

    great video. i really enjoyed watching all the greats since 1960. wilhelm was my favorite.

  • @debbstraw579
    @debbstraw579 Před rokem

    When I watched the knuckleball documentary, it made me so fascinated by this pitch. Its so different and unique that i cant help to be excited if i hear a new pitcher is using it

    • @joemarshall4226
      @joemarshall4226 Před rokem

      I feel the same way. Two things that make baseball great are the knuckleball and the bunt.

  • @LordJudgement1818
    @LordJudgement1818 Před 10 měsíci +1

    When i played littled league i thought the knuckle ball was the greatest thing ever. I played right and 2nd base so never really got to pitch but one day we needed one inning so the coach out me in in the 7th. I had been practicing with my step dad for weeks just in case. I stood on the mound and just threw knuckles. I walked two then struck out 3 in a row. Inning over. One of my most favorite baseball playing memories.
    I never pitched again but man it was fun.