Comments
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you can't call that pitch a breaking ball. I seen a high .school. friend pitch a ball that went straight and way out side and about 4 feet from the plate would looked like it hit something invisible and would go from a way out side to an inside strike . can't find anything close to that from major league pitchers. all the m l teams wanted him then he broke his arm didn't want to ask but that's probably what end his base ball prospects
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Nope. Definitely was not a curveball. Back to the minors.
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If Mr. Kershaw were to stand tall, turn the back of his pitching upper arm to face toward home plate, rotate his hips and shoulders forward together over his glove foot and aimed his acromial line at the strike zone, then Mr. Kershaw would not have had a bad back, increased his release velocity and he could throw over-spin curves to the pitching arm side of home plate
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Curveballs are best viewed from the side, not front. This is because curves drop more than they deviate to side.
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That was super straight. is the curve horizontal?
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Would be better from a lower angle camera.
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Nice viideo when he is about to throw the ball at 0:11 it look's like he is giving up
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:P
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:P
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All these people in the comments who've apparently never been in the batters box in their entire lives. Leaving his hand it looks like a ball high. It starts dropping about halfway to the plate and then breaks late and drops all the way to the batters knees. If you say it looks straight, 1. That's the point, to fool the batter, and 2. Why are you even here.
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That was nasty
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bad video
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looked straight to me
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Not a curve u can tell just by how he releases if
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not that it matters with a curve like that but he totally tipped that pitch lol
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Where's the curve?
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It is very difficult to be a pitcher and throw curve balls
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that smile.
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No wonder hitters look lost at the plate when he throws it. Nasty.
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JESUS CHRIST
0m 0sLength
Slow Motion Curveball Strike Out!