
Curveballs are disappearing in MLB as velocity obsession reshapes pitching landscape
The Athletics have thrown curves on just 2.5% of pitches this season. The overall big league figure dropped from 10.7% in 2019 to 8.1% last year, the lowest since MLB starting tracking in 2008, before rising slightly to 8.5% this season.
There were 22,962 fewer curveballs in 2024 than five years earlier.
'You don't really see a lot of people throwing 12-6 curveballs anymore,' Tampa Bay pitcher Shane Baz said. 'They'd rather have a hard cutter/slider. It's a lot easier for guys to throw a sweeper than it is a 12-6 curveball.'
Baz's 28.1% is seventh in curveball use among those who have thrown at least 1,000 pitches this season.
Baltimore's Charlie Morton, first at 39%, learned to throw a hook from his dad.
'He was reading some article or maybe he was reading some pitching book,' Baltimore's 41-year-old right-hander said. 'You basically throw it like you're re-throwing a knife.'
Curveballs have been around for a century and a half
Hall of Famer Candy Cummings, a 145-game winner, is credited with inventing the curveball in 1863 when he was 14, discovering the movement when he threw sea shells into the Atlantic Ocean. Some attribute the curve to amateur pitcher Fred Goldsmith in 1870.
With an average velocity of 80.2 mph, curves are the slowest and loopiest of breaking pitches, often disrupting the timing of batters set for smoke. The phrase 'thrown a curveball' has become part of the English language, much like 'screwball,' more a phrase than a pitch these days.
Sandy Koufax, Nolan Ryan and Clayton Kershaw were among the consummate curveballers, bamboozling batters as balls they gave up on dropped like hang gliders into the strike zone.
'It's become an industry of throwing over pitching,' New York Yankees senior adviser Omar Minaya said. 'When you pitch, you use different pitches. What we're seeing in the industry as a whole, especially with showcases, is people are looking more at velocity than pitchability — as a scout, I said that unfortunately.'
Former pitcher Dallas Braden, now a broadcaster, longs for those days of deception.
'You almost sympathize with the hitter in the moment because you're like: Damn, I couldn't have hit that. He couldn't hit that. Nobody could have hit that,' Braden said. 'The eephus is now almost like as close as we get, when a position player is on the mound, to an aesthetically pleasing pitch like that, just the visual presentation of the pitch starting in the clouds and ending up at the ankles.'
Nike's 'Chicks Dig the Long Ball' commercial defined baseball in the Steroids Era. These days the slogan might as well be: 'Velo Rules!' There were just 214 pitches of 100 mph or more in 2008. There were a record 3,880 two years ago and this year is on track for 3,252.
In tandem, starting pitcher use has dropped. Starters have averaged just under 5 1/3 innings this season, down from 6 1/3 innings in the 1980s. Their pitch count averages 85.7, down from 97 in 2010.
Throw as hard as you can for as long as you can is the mantra
Average four-seam fastball velocity is a record 94.4 mph this season, up from 91.9 mph when MLB started tracking in 2008. But fastballs — four-seam, two-seam and cutters, have dropped from 62.1% to 55%.
Those missing hooks and heaters have been replaced by sliders, sweepers and slurves. They are 22.6% of pitches this year, up from 13.9% in 2008, and their average velocity has risen to 84.8 mph from 83.4 mph.
Colorado throws curves the most often at 15.6%, not that it has brought any success to a team that entered the break at 22-74, on track for a 37-125 finish and the post-1900 record for losses.
The Athletics haven't thrown 10% curveballs since 2017.
'If you look around the game, swing and miss has taken more of a priority, so guys are trying to throw more sweepers with more horizontal movement, or they're trying to throw the slider really hard at the bottom of the zone,' Athletics pitching coach Scott Emerson said. 'They're worried about contact with the curveball.'
Generational change in the 2020s
Veteran pitchers note the curve's decline as youngsters integrate into staffs.
'As you're an amateur going to the big leagues guys are looking at velo. Guys are just looking at stuff,' Yankees ace Gerrit Cole said. 'Velo is important and it pays.'
Maybe because the pitchers who throw curves are committed, batters have a .225 average this season on curves, down from .263 on fastballs and up slightly from .222 on sliders, sweepers and slurves.
'That's just how the game is trending: to throw it as hard as you can, spin it the best you can and hope the hitter doesn't hit it,' Emerson said. 'The hitters are up there trying to swing as hard they can. If they hit it with hard contact, make 27 swings that are really hard, you got a chance to hit a homer here and there. And it's taken away from the contact-type pitchers.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
15 minutes ago
- Axios
Marlins star Kyle Stowers' Best Day Ever in Miami
Miami Marlins left fielder Kyle Stowers is having an impressive 2025 season. He made his first All-Star Game and ranks among the MLB's most prolific home run hitters. We caught up with the California native to ask him how he likes to unwind during an off-day in Miami. Answers edited for space 🍊 Morning Meal: My wife and I like going to Pura Vida because of their healthy and tasty options. I like to get the overnight oats and maybe a smoothie. We also love to go to Pasión del Cielo. They have so many good coffee options. 🐶 Morning Activity: We love to walk our dog around the Key Biscayne Dog Beach. We also like to lay out for a little. I love going in the water, because I think ocean water is healing. We then will walk our dog on the beach, and he'll put his feet in the water. ⛱ Afternoon activity: I love to go to get a day pass at a resort and hang out by the pool. It feels like vacation when you go to those places and get to order food or a drink to one of the cabanas. Having beach access is also a nice perk. I just love being by the water. 🌮 Lunch: I'm probably going to The Taco Stand. We have a few of them in San Diego, so it really just reminds me of home. Mexican food is my favorite, so it's the perfect spot. I'm probably getting one of the burritos there but will sometimes get a quesadilla or rolled tacos. 🍣 Dinner: There is no shortage of fine dining in Miami, that's for sure! But I think my favorite spot I've been to so far is Mila in South Beach. I really liked the sushi rolls I got there, but their other options are amazing, too. 🌙 Evening activity: Usually on off days we try to get home fairly early and have some time to wind down. But if we were to go out, we would probably go to Brickell with teammates and watch whatever sports is on at one of the restaurants. I love spending time with the guys off the field.

Washington Post
16 minutes ago
- Washington Post
Ichiro Suzuki zings Hall of Fame voter who kept him from unanimous election
Ichiro Suzuki's Baseball Hall of Fame induction speech Sunday was full of remarks about how grateful he was to those who helped him reach that point and to the fans who drove him to stay atop his craft through 19 MLB seasons. The longtime Seattle Mariners star also sprinkled in plenty of humor — including when he took a jab at the one Baseball Writers' Association of America voter who prevented him from unanimous election to Cooperstown. 'Three thousand hits or 262 hits in one season are achievements recognized by the writers,' Suzuki said of two of his most notable accomplishments. 'Well, all but one of you. And by the way, the offer for that writer to have dinner at my home has now expired.' That was a reference to comments Suzuki made shortly after he was elected to the Hall of Fame in January. The results of that process showed the 10-time all-star was included on 393 of 394 ballots. That gave Suzuki a tie with Derek Jeter for the second-highest vote percentage in Hall of Fame history, but it still left Mariano Rivera, inducted in 2019, as the only unanimous selection since voting began nine decades ago. At a news conference in January, Suzuki said in remarks translated from the Japanese he spoke at the time: 'I was able to receive many votes from the writers, and I'm grateful for them. But there's one writer that I wasn't able to get a vote from. I would like to invite him over to my house, and we'll have a drink together and we'll have a good chat.' Apparently, that chat won't be happening. At least by remaining anonymous, though, the voter in question won't also be getting earfuls from Mariners fans and others frustrated by the resumption of the BBWAA's pre-Rivera habit of never voting in a player unanimously. That apparent tradition goes back to the Hall's first class, voted upon in 1936, when not even Babe Ruth — headlining a legendary quintet that also featured Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner, Christy Mathewson and Walter Johnson — could muster 100 percent of the vote. In the decades that followed, all-time greats managing only to get above the 90 percent mark included titans such as Ted Williams, Willie Mays, Hank Aaron, Stan Musial, Rickey Henderson, Cal Ripken Jr. and Suzuki's celebrated former Mariners teammate, Ken Griffey Jr. The first Japan-born position player in MLB, Suzuki didn't arrive until he was 27 and had already collected 1,278 hits in Japan's top league. He proceeded to rack up 3,089 more hits in MLB, giving him a total of 4,367 as a professional. (By comparison, Pete Rose's 4,256 hits are the most in MLB history.) Playing in the majors until he was 45, primarily for the Mariners as well as in stints with the New York Yankees and Miami Marlins, Suzuki also set an MLB single-season record with 262 hits in 2004, and he earned two batting titles and 10 Gold Glove awards. In 2001, his first MLB season, he became just the second player to win rookie of the year and MVP honors in the same year; at 42 in 2016, he batted .291 over 365 plate appearances en route to a career average of .311. In 2017, according to a report from the BBWAA voted to make all its Hall of Fame ballots public, but Cooperstown officials rejected the plan. Writers are allowed to share their ballots on an individual basis. To get enshrined in the Hall of Fame by the BBWAA — players and other MLB figures can subsequently reach Cooperstown through smaller veterans committees — at least 75 percent of the vote is required. Also reaching that threshold this year were a pair of ex-pitchers in CC Sabathia (86.8 percent) and Billy Wagner (82.5 percent). During his speech, Suzuki thanked former members of the Yankees for being in attendance, then deadpanned, 'I know you guys are really here today for CC, but that's okay.' That was one of several one-liners Suzuki shared while delivering his speech in English. Early in his remarks, he told the crowd: 'I hope that I can hold the values of the Hall of Fame, but please — I am 51 years old now, so easy on the hazing. I don't need to wear a Hooters uniform again.' He ribbed the Marlins by claiming that when team officials phoned him to offer a contract in 2015, he had 'never heard' of the franchise. Suzuki also delivered an emphatic impression of longtime Mariners broadcaster Rick Rizzs. At another point, Suzuki told Cooperstown attendees: 'The truth is, without baseball you would say, 'This guy is such a dumba--.' I have bad teammates, right, Bob Costas?' He was referring to a years-ago interview with the veteran sportscaster, who was sent into peals of laughter after asking Suzuki for his favorite American expression. Suzuki, who tended to speak Japanese with an interpreter during media appearances, replied to Costas by lightheartedly blaming a 'bad teammate' for teaching him this string of English words: 'August in Kansas City, it's hotter than two rats in a f---ing wool sock.' (The expletive likely came after the word 'rats' in the original telling.) On Sunday, Suzuki saluted his wife, Yumiko, as 'the most consistent teammate I ever had.' He credited her with never showing any possible 'doubts' about his ability to play at the highest level in American baseball. 'Look at me — I'm 5-11 and 170 pounds,' Suzuki said. 'When I came to America, many people said I was too skinny to compete with bigger major leaguers. The first time I ran out on the field, I was in awe of the competition. But I knew if I stuck to my beliefs about preparation, I could overcome the doubts. Even my own.'

Associated Press
16 minutes ago
- Associated Press
A year after they were (to a degree) deadline sellers, the Blue Jays are soaring
Even when they traded away a handful of established players at last year's deadline, the Toronto Blue Jays clearly believed a rebound was possible. A year later, they have a comfortable lead atop the AL East. It's hard to say that last year's deadline jump-started Toronto's turnaround, but the important thing is the Blue Jays didn't give up on their core despite being on their way to a last-place finish in 2024. They dealt players like Yusei Kikuchi and Justin Turner — but Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Bo Bichette remained with Toronto. Keeping those two was something of a risk given that both could become free agents after this season. Bichette still can, but the Blue Jays were able to sign Guerrero to a $500-million, 14-year contract in April. Guerrero, Bichette and George Springer are part of a Toronto team that ranks third in the American League in OPS while leading the majors in batting average and on-base percentage. Even after a lopsided loss to Detroit on Sunday, the Blue Jays have a 5 1/2-game lead over the second-place New York Yankees — although Toronto also has the second-worst run differential in the division. The Blue Jays have the best record in baseball by a half-game over the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers. Toronto has won 21 of its last 27 games, and included in that stretch is a 6-1 record against the Yankees. The Blue Jays are 7-3 against New York, meaning they have clinched that season series should it become a tiebreaker. New York is just 11-18 against the AL East. Trivia time The Blue Jays last made the World Series in 1993. Who are the only other American League teams with longer droughts since their most recent pennants? Tumbling Tigers Detroit's 10-4 win over Toronto on Sunday snapped a six-game skid for the Tigers — and that does not do justice to how poorly they were playing. Detroit had lost 12 of 13, being outscored 89-33 in the process. Ace Tarik Skubal can only do so much. The lone win during that stretch came in one of his starts — a 2-1 victory over Texas on July 20. When he took the mound six days later against Toronto, he threw six scoreless innings, only to have the Tigers go on to lose 6-1. Before Detroit fans panic too much, the Tigers had built up such a big lead that they still have an eight-game advantage over second-place Cleveland in the AL Central after Sunday's victory. FanGraphs gives them a 95.9% chance to make the playoffs. But their chances of earning a first-round bye — by having one of the top two records among AL division winners — is down to 52.6%. Line of the week More like line of the decade. Or perhaps the century. A's rookie Nick Kurtz went 6 for 6 with four home runs, eight RBIs and six runs in a 15-3 rout of Houston on Friday night. Kurtz became the 20th player in major league history — and first rookie — with a four-homer game. He also doubled and singled, so he tied the single-game record for total bases with 19. Comeback of the week Minnesota had a one-run lead at Los Angeles in the bottom of the ninth Wednesday — and Griffin Jax retired the first two batters for the Dodgers. Then it all unraveled for the Twins. Mookie Betts singled, Shohei Ohtani was walked intentionally, Esteury Ruiz drew another walk and then Freddie Freeman singled home two runs for a 4-3 win. The Twins had a win probability of 95.6% after the second out, according to Baseball Savant. Trivia answer The Orioles (1983), Athletics (1990), Twins (1991) and Mariners (never). ___ AP MLB: