Perez Pitching Well
The Bucs currently lead the Red Sox, 2-1.
Whatever the Bucs' motivations for describing Oliver Perez as something other than a strikeout pitcher and denying that his velocity was especially important, Perez looks pretty darn close to his 2004 strikeout-throwing form right now. I'm excited. While his control is still a little shaky - he has only walked one guy, but he's running up a lot of three-ball counts and plainly isn't making all his pitches - he's throwing quite hard. ESPN's radar gun says his fastball is coming in at 84-87 MPH, but that's obviously wrong. My guess would be he's throwing 94-95 - not quite as fast as he threw in '04, but still awfully fast and way faster than he was apparently throwing as recently as ten days ago, when reports had him throwing about 90 MPH.
He's also throwing a breaking ball that, while not quite as knee-bucklingly ridiculous as it was in '04, is very good and is obviously confusing Boston hitters. He has also thrown a couple of nice changeups. He's striking out batters all over the place and his control is improving as he goes along. Last week, I was skeptical of Perez's and Humberto Cota's claims that Perez would pick up velocity as his arm strength improved, but that's plainly what has happened.
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I worried about Ollie
by steve_z on Mar 29, 2006 3:21 PM EST 0 recs
Why the skepticism on the radar gun?
He was very effective. Dukish. The gun may have been off, but I don't think by that much. If he throws his fastball low 90's, he could be a very good pitcher because of the dramatic change of speed on his breaking ball.
by azibuck on Mar 29, 2006 4:37 PM EST 0 recs
Duke
by Charlie on
Mar 29, 2006 5:20 PM EST
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Perez
by ILLZ on
Mar 29, 2006 5:30 PM EST
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The Gun
In the WBC when Perez faced Clemens, Ollie didn't hit 90, but Clemens was at 93-94, so I figured the speed shown for Ollie was legit. Schilling's velocity was way down at the end of last year, so even though he was also clocked in the mid-80's today, it's hard to say if it's because he also lost velocity, or the gun was off.
By the way, I became a big fan of Orel Hershiser today. I'd love to listen to him and Joe Morgan call a game together. I know (or have read anyway) that seamheads despise Morgan for being old school, but for fans of technique, he does a good job of breaking down a swing. And so it was today with Hershiser and pitching.
I kinda think the average fan doesn't care, or even know what is meant by "setting up a hitter." But Hershiser gave several peeks into what pitchers may have been doing. I find that stuff very interesting.
by azibuck on
Mar 29, 2006 9:45 PM EST
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The gun
by Pat on Mar 29, 2006 5:51 PM EST 0 recs




