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i heard about this pich this morning and i'm very much intrested in persuing it....and links/info would be great

2006-11-03 02:08:45 · 6 answers · asked by bigo35543 1 in Sports Baseball

6 answers

The gyroball is the name given to a breaking baseball pitch purported to be used by players in Japan. The pitch was developed by two Japanese researchers, Ryutaro Himeno and Kazushi Tezuka, who used computer simulations to create a new style of delivery intended to reduce stress on the pitcher. At the point of release, instead of having the pitcher's arm move inwards towards the body (the standard method used in the United States), the pitcher rotates his arm so that it moves away from his body, towards 3rd base. The unusual method of delivery creates a bullet-like spin on the ball, like a bicycle tire spins when facing the spokes or a perfectly thrown football. When thrown by a right hander, the pitch moves sharply down and away from right handed batters and towards left handed batters.

In baseball, most pitches are thrown with backspin, like the fastball, or with a more forward spinning motion, like the curveball and the slider. Batters use the arm speed of the pitcher and the spin on a baseball, highlighted by the seams, to judge the speed of the ball. The gyroball is thrown with the arm speed of a fastball but goes much slower, and since it has a bullet-like spinning motion, on occasion (perhaps when the seams are hidden from view of the batter) it will make experienced batters swing wildly ahead or behind the ball.

The gyroball is one of the available pitches in Baseball Mogul 2007, a baseball computer game. In that game, the trajectory of the ball looks similar to a flat fastball or change up, with a late lateral break (away from right-handed batters as thrown by right-handed pitchers). It was once thought that the only pitcher in the game that possesses the gyroball in his arsenal is Daisuke Matsuzaka. However, he himself says that he is just trying to learn how to throw it [1].

The gyroball is also often confused with a completely different Japanese pitch called the shuuto, due to an error in a well-known article by baseball writer Will Carroll (see external link). Although Carroll later corrected himself, the confusion still persists.

2006-11-03 04:08:11 · answer #1 · answered by Answerer17 6 · 2 0

Step 1 - Go to a restaurant and buy a gyro.

Step 2 - Put a baseball inside of the gyro.

Step 3 - Throw it.

2006-11-03 05:35:26 · answer #2 · answered by J-Far 6 · 0 0

I heard about it today to, and i was watching it on You Tube, looks intresting and really hard to throw

2006-11-03 04:16:06 · answer #3 · answered by rcaines1 3 · 0 0

2 tell you the truth, i saw the pitch on a website that 1 of the guys provided, and it just looks like a curvball.

2006-11-03 08:47:45 · answer #4 · answered by Compton,CA 4 · 0 0

NO ONE ACTUALLY THROWS A GYROBALL!!

I am getting really sick of this myth. Matsuzaka is the main one, and he says he does not throw it, he says he does not know how to.

!!

2006-11-03 07:50:23 · answer #5 · answered by holdon 4 · 0 0

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sboi0EWp8ao

2006-11-03 04:22:53 · answer #6 · answered by angelo l 1 · 0 0

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