[情報] Matt Olson 和他的玩具發球機
本文由DOB 發表在Athletic,大意就是前勇Tommy La Stella 2020年八月底從天使交易到運
動家時,帶了一台160塊錢的紅色小發球機,那種給小朋友玩、用空氣壓力來發射球的機器,
發射出來的球是橡膠之類的材質,僅有實際棒球的一半重。La Stella 透過把機器靠自己揮
擊區很靠近來訓練自己打四縫線高速球的能力,而且效果顯著(Tommy 被三振率極低)。
Matt Olson 一直對四縫線苦手,看到Tommy 使用這機器之後決定仿效,發現效果奇佳,這也
反映在他去年的成績上。他說他有時揮不到四縫線時,就會告訴自己,把球當成是從那個紅
色小發球機出來的即可。
當然,隊上不是每個人都對這一套訓練方式都買單,卷毛就保持懷疑的態度。(不過我想如
果能發明一台給小朋友打的滑球機,搞不好對卷毛還真的有用 XDD)
總之,球季剛剛開始而已,就當作故事來看看也不錯,實際上是不是真的這麼有效,可以繼
續觀察。
——————————————————
本季前幾場當然打得不太好,不過本隊向來4月打不好,所以也就罷了。
除了五/六號先發是個大問號以外,昨天從Snit/Chipper/Ian本人的訪談來看,因為春訓過
短,Ian 目前還找不到放球點(或原本的投球姿勢),除了要有心理準備他可能還會爆幾
場外,更要擔心姿勢跑掉身體代償是否會造成潛在的受傷,但…這也沒辦法了。
另外,我們的外野守備一如預期持續在增加投手的負擔,包括Ozuna 和 Rosa 都是,但…..
這也好像無解,即便阿酷回來的都不一定有解。
目前只能祈禱打擊能早日熱起來,這五場比賽打擊斷層相當巨大的。
(原文)
The Braves are seeing a version of Matt Olson with a significantly reduced strik
eout rate and higher contact rate than he produced before 2021, and their new fi
rst baseman gives plenty of credit for the improvements to former Braves player
Tommy La Stella and a little red pitching machine.
“It’s called, like, Heater PowerAlley,” Olson said. “It’s about 150 bucks —
well, it used to be; I think the demand has gone up for it. But yeah, Tommy, wh
en he got traded over to the A’s, he brought it over. It was part of his routin
e and pretty much simulates good four-seam fastballs. Exaggerates them. And I wa
s like, well, this guy never strikes out, and I struggle with four-seamers. So I
tried it out and felt like it was something that I wanted to work in.”
The results have been nothing short of revelatory for Olson, who went from being
a high-strikeout hitter to one with a modest whiff rate while hitting for a muc
h higher average and even more power.
After posting career highs in average (.271), OBP (.371), doubles (35), home run
s (39) and RBIs (111) in 2021, along with a career-high 88 walks and a full-seas
on career-low 113 strikeouts, Olson is 8-for-16 with two doubles, one homer and
more walks (five) than strikeouts (three) in his first five games for the Braves
.
That’s a tiny sample and not anywhere near sustainable, but Olson has had a loo
k about him at the plate since the day he joined Atlanta. He had three consecuti
ve multi-hit games before going 0-for-2 with two walks Monday. The Braves muster
ed just four hits — two after the first inning — in an 11-2 series-opening los
s to the Washington Nationals before the fourth sellout crowd in five games at T
ruist Park.
Huascar Ynoa got rocked for seven hits, five runs and two walks in three innings
in his first start of the season for the Braves, who are 2-3.
Sunday against Cincinnati, Olson had three of the Braves’ seven hits, including
a homer off rookie phenom Hunter Greene on a 101 mph fastball, the second-faste
st pitch any Braves player had hit for a home run in the pitch-tracking era that
began in 2008, according to MLB stats guru Sarah Langs. Olson, a 6-foot-5 left-
handed hitter, drove it 417 feet, just to the left of straightaway center.
Braves hitting coach Kevin Seitzer has relished his first few weeks working with
Olson.
“Oh, it’s been phenomenal,” the veteran coach said. “I mean, he’s just real
ly impressed me all the way around — mentally, emotionally — with his routine,
his batting practice, his plan of attack when he gets in the box. I can see why
he’s had success. He’s got a real great routine in the cage, and he’s got th
is little machine that he uses … that helps him to hit elevated fastballs with
the ride that keeps him short. It helped him a lot. He said he did it every day
last year.”
Some background: Olson, an Atlanta-area native and Parkview High graduate, was i
n his fifth season with Oakland when the A’s traded for La Stella on Aug. 29, 2
020. La Stella had been a first-time All-Star in 2019 with the Los Angeles Angel
s, hitting .295 with 16 homers and striking out just 28 times in 321 plate appea
rances, an extremely low whiff rate in today’s game.
La Stella finished with an even lower strikeout rate in 2020: 12 Ks in 228 at-ba
ts with the Angels and A’s.
Meanwhile, Olson had 79 homers during 2018-2020, a rate of 37 homers per 162 gam
es, but he hit .246 with a .337 OBP in that span and had 378 strikeouts with 155
walks in 1,452 plate appearances, for a strikeout rate of 175 per 162 games.
Enter La Stella, who brought with him to Oakland a lower-end version in the Heat
er brand of pitching machines. The PowerAlley Pro Real Baseball Machine retails
for $159.99 at Amazon and Academy Sports.
“It’s, like, for 10-year-old kids,” Seitzer said. “I mean, you have to put i
t close in order for it to be hard enough. But it’s a cool little pitching mach
ine.”
That’s right, a $160 device for kids has helped turn Olson from a whiff-prone s
lugger into one of the elite all-around hitters in baseball since the beginning
of last season. The Braves traded four prospects for him on March 14, then signe
d Olson, 28, to an eight-year, $168 million contract extension the next day.
The PowerAlley looks small and rudimentary compared to pitching machines used by
professional teams, or even those used by colleges and plenty of high school te
ams. But La Stella swears by it, and now Olson does, too, even if other Braves t
eammates have been reluctant to try it.
“It’s just a little bitty red machine. It’s made out of plastic that shoots t
hese softer, baseball-sized balls,” Seitzer said. “He puts it about 20 feet aw
ay from him, and it throws gas. And he wants it, like, right at his letters. And
it’s on you. Nobody else (among his teammates) wants to touch it, and he wears
it out every day, right before the game. That’s his go-to right before the gam
e. Comes in, gets 15 to 20 swings on it and, boom, he’s out (to the field).”
The little bitty machine Matt Olson swears by, pictured in the Braves’ batting
cage at Truist Field. (David O’Brien / The Athletic)
Braves shortstop Dansby Swanson is one of those reluctant teammates. “Obviously
, everyone finds their own niche. I have not tried it. I mean, you can’t know a
nything until you try it. I don’t know how big of a fan I’d be of hitting non-
real baseballs because then when you hit a baseball, sometimes it feels like it’
s a kagillion pounds.
“I do it my own way; I crank up the (regular pitching) machine real high. Just
because the harder you can make it down there, the easier it tends to be in the
game.”
But Swanson was quick to add that the red machine works for Olson. “He’s found
something with that,” he said.
Olson estimated he sets up the machine 25-30 feet away. The proximity makes the
below-average velocity of the fastballs it cranks out seem much higher because t
hey’re on top of the hitter so quickly. He positions it to throw high fastballs
.
“Yeah, it’s kind of an exaggeration drill, but I like it,” he said. “Because
my swing can get a little long and I can get under four-seamers. So when I feel
like I can get in there and get on top of that thing, I feel like I can go into
the game and take my normal swing.”
Olson has seen marked improvement hitting high-velocity pitches since he began w
orking with the machine in the final month of the 2020 season. Its effects have
shown after he spent that offseason and the following spring using the machine a
s part of his routine.
“There’s times when I foul under (a fastball up in the strike zone), and I tel
l myself, ‘Treat it like the red machine,’” he said.
After posting a 34.8 percent whiff rate and 70.1 in-zone contact rate in 2020, O
lson had a 23 percent whiff rate and 81.6 percent in-zone contact rate in 2021.
It’s early, but he’s better in both categories so far this season.
“He’s phenomenal,” Braves pitcher Ian Anderson said. “He’s going the other
way (opposite field). You only see the highlights of his past years; it’s all p
ull-side home runs. You kind of just build up in your head what he is, but to wa
tch him go the other way, it’s been great. It’s been fun to watch. He’s got a
great eye — kind of shows how his OPS has been so high the last couple of year
s.”
When Olson hits off the PowerAlley machine, he uses white dimpled polyurethane b
alls specifically designed for the device, which are the same size as baseballs
but half the weight. Seitzer said he’d never seen one of the machines before Ol
son arrived.
“You can use our Hack Attack machines too,” Seitzer said, referring to an adva
nced pitching machine used by the Braves that costs many times more than the Hea
ter ProAlley. “But he likes this one because it sits low, so it gets that eleva
ted rise to it where he’s got to get on top. And depending on the pitcher, he’
ll adjust to what height he wants it at, how they’re gonna attack him.”
Swanson noticed that elevation aspect of the PowerAlley machine and thinks he se
es how it’s helped Olson.
“It gives the illusion of — you know how guys spin the ball real well? It give
s that same illusion,” Swanson said. “I think that’s why it helps so much. Be
cause it, like, gives that kind of rise-ball illusion.”
(Photo: David J. Griffin / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc), 來自: 114.36.168.152 (臺灣)
※ 文章網址: https://www.ptt.cc/bbs/Braves/M.1649777515.A.D71.html
推
04/13 01:01,
2年前
, 1F
04/13 01:01, 1F
推
04/13 01:15,
2年前
, 2F
04/13 01:15, 2F
→
04/13 01:15,
2年前
, 3F
04/13 01:15, 3F
※ 編輯: turkeyma (140.118.184.184 臺灣), 04/13/2022 10:17:02
推
04/13 13:17,
2年前
, 4F
04/13 13:17, 4F
推
04/13 13:24,
2年前
, 5F
04/13 13:24, 5F
→
04/13 13:37,
2年前
, 6F
04/13 13:37, 6F
→
04/13 13:37,
2年前
, 7F
04/13 13:37, 7F
→
04/13 13:37,
2年前
, 8F
04/13 13:37, 8F
→
04/13 19:24,
2年前
, 9F
04/13 19:24, 9F
推
04/13 19:35,
2年前
, 10F
04/13 19:35, 10F
→
04/13 20:08,
2年前
, 11F
04/13 20:08, 11F
→
04/13 20:08,
2年前
, 12F
04/13 20:08, 12F
推
04/14 05:44,
2年前
, 13F
04/14 05:44, 13F
推
04/14 08:27,
2年前
, 14F
04/14 08:27, 14F
→
04/14 09:37,
2年前
, 15F
04/14 09:37, 15F
Braves 近期熱門文章
98
224
PTT體育區 即時熱門文章
52
90
163
294