[討論] 脫胎換骨的Jake Arrieta
這篇出來好一陣子
一直沒時間翻
現在也沒時間翻就是了( ′-`)y-~
原作者的觀察點主要是以下內容
1. 更穩定的投球機制,其他文章有提到,霸西歐用高爾夫球技巧協助投手改進。
2. 投手丘的佔位改變,偏向右打者打擊區,讓右打非常頭痛,因為球就像從背後過來。
3. 配球改變,比如用更多的滑球(Arrieta說是滑球,但是肉眼來看軌跡很像卡特)等等...
有興趣就看看吧
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/building-jake-arrieta/
Let’s go back to 1920. Let’s look at starting pitchers who threw at least
75 innings in consecutive big-league seasons. Relative to last year, Jake
Arrieta‘s K-BB% has improved by 14 percentage points. That’s the
fourth-greatest improvement within the sample. Relative to last year, Arrieta
’s FIP- has improved by 64 points. That’s the single greatest improvement
within the sample, edging out 2007-2008 Cliff Lee. This is what a breakout
looks like. This is what maybe the biggest breakout looks like.
It’s up to you to determine whether or not Jake Arrieta is an ace, but he’s
certainly generated ace-like results for the past several months, so if he’s
not an ace yet, he’s on the right track. Six times already, he’s held an
opponent hitless into the fifth. Three times, he’s held an opponent hitless
into the seventh. Twice, he’s held an opponent hitless into the eighth.
Arrieta’s flirted with history a few times, and while he hasn’t sealed the
deal on an actual no-hitter, he’s at least earned greater familiarity and
exposure. The Arrieta breakout, by now, is obvious. And more and more people
are becoming aware of it.
So, we think we know what we have. How did this happen? How was Jake Arrieta
built? Let’s condense his whole story into a blog post. Seems editorially
responsible.
Establish a foundation
Arrieta wasn’t born 6’4, 225, but he got there eventually, probably the
former ahead of the latter. Arrieta was blessed with genes allowing for a
pitcher’s body, and then he developed interest in becoming a pitcher, which is
the other necessary component. Arrieta played with a high-school program in
Texas, which is a good place to get better at sports, and then in time he wound
up with a major collegiate program, getting him exposure, while also getting
him experience and high-level coaching. In college, Arrieta was throwing hard,
with other pitches. He met the most general requirements for getting to the
majors.
So he got drafted, and he got developed by a big-league organization. More
experience, more coaching, more exercise. Staying healthy enough, Arrieta
reached the majors and performed inconsistently. Bits and pieces were there,
but not often enough, and not often together. But you could say that Arrieta
was an unsolved jigsaw puzzle. The puzzle pieces were there on the table —
they just had to be properly linked.
Add balance
The secret to better pitching is always the same: improved mechanical
consistency. You can repeat your performance if you can repeat your delivery.
With a consistent delivery, a pitcher can locate his fastballs, and then he can
build off that to make the other pitches work. What about a pitcher who learns
a new pitch, you say? A pitch is just a grip and an arm movement. It’s nothing
without mechanical consistency. Everything has the same basic explanation.
With Chris Bosio and the Cubs, Arrieta’s worked on his throwing motion. He’s
forever been working on his throwing motion — that never really stops — but
with the Cubs, instruction has clicked. Click through to that link, and you can
hear Arrieta for yourself, talking about keeping his shoulders level, and
talking about timing with his front leg. Arrieta’s just tried to find
repeatable balance, and from all indications, he’s had it. He’s put together
a throwing motion that keeps him comfortable and powerful, and better
consistency means better command, and better command means better everything.
Used to be, Arrieta could locate his pitches, sometimes. Now he can locate his
pitches more of the times.
Add a different mix
Some people say that Jake Arrieta has a cutter. Arrieta himself says he has a
hard slider. It doesn’t really matter — those are just different words for
the same thing, and, armed with his greater consistency, Arrieta’s grown a
hell of a lot more comfortable with his slider in 2014. Eno wrote about this
all the way back in June. With the help of Brooks Baseball, let’s watch Arrieta
’s mix over time:
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/building-jake-arrieta/arrieta5-2/
He’s doubled up on his slider usage. It’s cut into his sinker and fastball
usage. He loves the damned thing. He’ll throw it on the first pitch. He’ll
throw it behind in the count. He’ll throw it ahead in the count. He’ll throw
it with two strikes. He’ll throw it to lefties. He’ll throw it to righties. He
’ll throw it low. He’ll throw it at the hands. Arrieta has a pitch at 94 that
tails arm-side, he has a pitch at 94 that doesn’t tail arm-side as much, and
he has a pitch at 90 that breaks down and glove-side. The first one and the
last one are his primary pitches now, and they behave in opposite ways with
little velocity difference. That’s not very nice.
Add a different release
Going back to the Brooks Baseball well, let’s look at Arrieta’s horizontal
release points over time:
http://cdn.fangraphs.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/arrieta4.png
Arrieta’s throwing the ball more from the third-base side than ever, and while
it might seem like a minor thing, hitters have noticed. Said David Ross:
“He’s definitely a different pitcher,” Ross said. “He may have moved sides
of the rubber. I’d have to check the video to see that. I just remember seeing
his ball a lot better [previously] than I did today. It was definitely across
[the zone]. It felt almost like he was throwing behind me and locating down and
away. That’s really tough to do. You ask any pitcher, it’s probably one of
the hardest things to do.
Said Ryan Zimmerman:
“[Arrieta is] really tough on right handers. He’s right on the third-base
side of the rubber. It seems like the ball starts behind you,” Zimmerman said.
A few years ago, Arrieta moved to the other side of the rubber. So he’s toyed
with this before, but never with his current level of consistency. Now he’s
the best equipped to make a worthwhile tweak work, and if you look at some
screenshots, it seems like this is about more than just throwing from a few
inches over.
Baltimore, 2013:
http://www.fangraphs.com/blogs/building-jake-arrieta/arrieta1-3/
Chicago, 2014:
http://cdn.fangraphs.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/arrieta2.png
Pay attention to his left foot and left leg. In the Baltimore image, Arrieta’s
stepped forward, toward the plate. In the Chicago images, Arrieta’s stepped
more toward the right-handed batter’s box, and his leg as we can see it is at
a more pronounced angle. This could contribute to that feeling of Arrieta
throwing from behind a righty, because it looks like he’s stepping toward a
right-handed batter until he lets go of the ball. I’ve never stepped in
against Arrieta before, but this could add to his deception, and given how hard
he throws, every split-second matters. His somewhat unconventional delivery
could make the ball more tricky to pick up.
So you put everything together. To put it one way, a year ago, Arrieta threw
29% of his pitches with two strikes. This year, he’s thrown 29% of his pitches
with two strikes. But, a year ago, he got strikeouts with 17% of those pitches.
This year, he’s at 23%.
But let’s look at some pitch locations. Here’s some evidence of better
consistency:
Curve spot 2013 2014
RHB, below zone 37% 58%
LHB, below zone 47% 60%
Arrieta wants to use that curveball as a wipeout pitch. This year, he’s been a
lot better about keeping the pitch down, below the zone. The worst thing that
happens with a low curveball is that it bounces in the dirt. Worse things
happen to curveballs in the zone. Depending on the timing, those things can be
much worse.
How about spotting that slider?
Slider spot 2013 2014
RHB, over plate 51% 69%
LHB, over plate 52% 70%
Arrieta used to push a lot of his sliders glove-side, away against righties and
in against lefties. By changing his release, and by improving his consistency,
Arrieta’s brought the slider more over the plate. By being able to throw the
pitch for strikes, Arrieta can throw it in any count, against any hitter, and
the hitter has to prepare for a few different pitches at 90+ miles per hour.
Arrieta calls the pitch a hard slider, but his would be an unusual slider that
he likes to throw in the strike zone. An Arrieta slider over the plate isn’t a
hanging mistake. It’s usually intentional.
To close, let’s look at Arrieta’s more ordinary fastballs:
Fastball spot 2013 2014
RHB, inside 21% 42%
LHB, outside 48% 70%
This is another function of throwing more from the third-base side. That opens
up a different part of the plate, and this year Arrieta has doubled his rate of
inside fastballs against righties. Meanwhile, his rate of outside fastballs
against lefties is also up more than 20 percentage points, as Arrieta can get
his pitches to that arm-side edge. What this allows him to do is throw
different hard pitches to different halves of the zone, keeping barrels away,
and then by mixing in the sharp curveball, he can also just keep bats away.
Arrieta’s curveball has a career-best whiff rate. His fastballs have
career-best slugging percentages. A year ago, 16% of Arrieta’s two-strike
curves got strikeouts. This year that’s nearly doubled. You can ask a hitter
to prepare for only so much.
Jake Arrieta sure looks like an ace these days, a summer after getting traded
for a No. 3 in his walk year. What’s been the secret behind Arrieta’s
emergence? Actually, there have been a number of things, and without any one of
them, who’s to say where we’d be today? Is it because of the mechanical work?
Is it because of the slider? Is it because of the release? The answer, simply,
is “yes”, as Arrieta’s benefited from everything in raising his game to an
incredible level. If you’re looking for a shortcut, though, you can never go
wrong with “improved mechanical consistency.” Arrieta’s motion now is more
consistent. Therefore, so are his results, at a level inconsistent with his
history.
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やっ..........!!!!!!止めろペイモンこの野郎~~~~~~っ
地獄でいきなり聖書なんえ 読み上げやがってえ~~~~~~~~~っ!!殺すえおっ!!
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※ 文章網址: http://www.ptt.cc/bbs/Cubs/M.1411543585.A.CDD.html
※ 編輯: Zamned (59.115.140.231), 09/24/2014 15:27:16
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