Pitching speeds and reality

Welcome to Discuss Fastpitch

Your FREE Account is waiting to the Best Softball Community on the Web.

Ken Krause

Administrator
Admin
May 7, 2008
3,913
113
Mundelein, IL
Saw a game last night where a 12 (or probably 13 by now) was clocking speeds in the high 50s, and even a couple of 60s. This was on my own Jugs radar gun, which I keep tuned. The batteries were dying so there's a chance it might've been off, or I might've had it pointed at the bat instead of the pitch, but it seemed like it was correct.

That's pretty amazing, at least to me. I don't even see many older kids throwing the ball that hard. When I mentioned it to another coach he asked me how a kid that young gets to throw that hard. My answer, based on what I saw, was she picked her parents well.

I didn't see a lot of extraordinary technique. She seemed to rely mostly on her arm rather than getting her legs into it or attacking the pitch. But she was still zipping the ball. My guess is a lot of it is just raw ability, enhanced by good, solid mechanics that allow the ability to do its thing.

That got me thinking, though. People will bring their daughters to a pitching coach with expectation that the coach will have some magic that gets her to 60, or 65, mph. But there are more factors than just mechanics involved.

To understand, let's think of another athletic skill in softball -- running. Some kids are just naturally faster than others. A big, plodding kid who runs 60 feet in 3.8 seconds is never going to improve that speed to 2.8, no matter how many coaches she sees or how hard she works. Running a 2.8 is pretty extraordinary, which is why it's valued. If you don't have the DNA to begin with, you're not going to get there. The kid who's running 3.8 can improve on that score and get fast-er. Through maturity, hard work, effort, improved mechanics, etc. she might be able to get to 3.3. But that's not 2.8. There's a huge difference.

The same goes for pitchers. Some will never hit 60 mph, because they simply lack the physical capacity to do so. They aren't strong enough, or they don't have enough fast twitch muscles, to get there. There are things they can do to improve their pitching speed, but at some point they will have maxed out what their bodies can do. If that wasn't true, elite pitchers would be throwing 90 mph because they keep working on technique and strength training.

Everyone has a point they can't get beyond. The reality is it's lower for some than for others. The good news is pitchers can still be very effective even if they're not throwing in the 60s if they get good movement, change speeds, and mix their pitches well. And once the hitters catch up to the speed, the 12 year old who throws 60, if she doesn't keep working to improve her technique and develop other pitches, may very well find herself playing a different position, wondering what happened.

More...
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
42,866
Messages
680,338
Members
21,523
Latest member
Brkou812
Top