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?
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
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.
Love Aaron Nola’s sinker. The way he throws that front hip sinker to lefties and backdoor sinker to righties is nasty.
Keep up your truly interesting research and go Mets! Any papers out there to be read?
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?
IMO, fastball spin direction is 95% arm angle. I believe some pitchers have a bit of wrist angle that may modify it a little.
As a former QB, I’d also be intrigued to pick your brains about the idea of seam-shifted cutter
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
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.
As a former QB, I’d also be intrigued to pick your brains about the idea of seam-shifted cutter
All cutters are SSW unless they are really bullet sliders.