How Seam Shifted Wake sinkers depend on Gyro and Orientation

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2024

Комментарии •

  • @lorimeyers3839
    @lorimeyers3839 6 месяцев назад +1

    Love Aaron Nola’s sinker. The way he throws that front hip sinker to lefties and backdoor sinker to righties is nasty.

  • @MrVrob8
    @MrVrob8 2 года назад

    Keep up your truly interesting research and go Mets! Any papers out there to be read?

  • @Metsbat14
    @Metsbat14 Год назад

    Don't know if you'll ever see this, but I waa curious about the relationship between spin efficiency/gyro degree and spin direction. Is it possible to alter the spin axis of your fastball without lowering the efficiency?

    • @baseballaero5076
      @baseballaero5076  Год назад +1

      IMO, fastball spin direction is 95% arm angle. I believe some pitchers have a bit of wrist angle that may modify it a little.

  • @MrVrob8
    @MrVrob8 2 года назад

    As a former QB, I’d also be intrigued to pick your brains about the idea of seam-shifted cutter

  • @ASchmidt-yw9te
    @ASchmidt-yw9te 10 месяцев назад +1

    2 seam , 4 seam or any seam is the seam shift, a ball that breaks has a wake, that's the wake.
    Seam shifted wake. I call it scheme shifted wake. You are a special kind of crazy BS! LOLLOL

    • @colinbrown6023
      @colinbrown6023 9 месяцев назад +2

      Look at any slow mo of a seam shifted wake 2 seam. I like the Sonny Gray video uploaded by Robby Rowland. With 4 seam orientation that pitch is a cutter but because of the specific seam shifted wake orientation it moves the opposite way.

  • @MrVrob8
    @MrVrob8 2 года назад

    As a former QB, I’d also be intrigued to pick your brains about the idea of seam-shifted cutter

    • @baseballaero5076
      @baseballaero5076  Год назад

      All cutters are SSW unless they are really bullet sliders.