Tag: Humor

Throw Me Maybe: The Biomechanics of Carly Rae Jepsen

Is it fair to do a biomechanical pitching analysis of first-pitch hurler Carly Rae Jepsen?

We start with a small sample size of only one pitch. We don’t have the best angles from the endless animated GIFs that swept the web. There was no PitchF/X, both because the system is not normally turned on for ceremonial pitches and because the pitch didn’t travel far enough to register.

But just look at this:

That pitch, thrown Sunday at a Tampa Bay Rays game, demands the kind of serious biomechanical analysis that major league pitchers get, if only to answer one question: What the bleep happened?

As it turns out, it’s a simple issue.

The announcers at the time and her personal catcher, Rays pitcher Matt Moore, said Jepsen was throwing strikes in warm-ups, and an analysis of her delivery shows that it’s entirely possible. While I don’t have sophisticated biomechanical tools available, this doesn’t require more than a basic knowledge of pitching to understand.

Jepsen is throwing the full distance from the top of the mound. It’s a bold move, one that most first-pitch throwers avoid.

Her foot placement is a bit questionable, but she appears to have a solid base and good traction. Her stride is short, but not too short and is in line with the delivery. Her arm is into external rotation a bit early, but we’re talking about one pitch, not an injury concern over 35 starts. 

In the second picture, things still look on track. Her body is coming forward, her knee is over her foot and her torso is just slightly behind the normal “stack” position where foot, knee, glove and chest are all in a vertical line. Her elbow is slightly below the acromial line, with a bit of a head tilt to the “glove” side. This is not ideal, but not hugely problematic.

We see this from another angle in this picture. While it’s a better angle for Carly, it’s not a better angle for pitching. It’s more clear how far down her elbow is below the acromial line and how much weight has already been transferred to the front foot. This picture is the root of the problem that’s about to occur.

It’s here in this picture, just before release, that we see how the problem is beginning to manifest—and worse, it’s amplifying itself.

Because her weight transferred forward, her “push” comes from the back foot and raises her up rather than pushing her forward. Because her elbow was low, it’s forced to go up to get to the normal release point. Both her hand and foot are going up rather than forward, which is normally going to result in a looping arc pitch.

Instead, Jepsen does something unexpected and frankly, a bit more kinesthetically aware than she’ll get credit for. It’s as if she realizes that her body and her release point are going high.

In response, she cocks her wrist, dropping the release point and unintentionally changing the vector of force. It’s that simple mistake that results in the ball going down and across her body. 

Which results in this look from Carly and universal disdain from a snarky internet.

And let’s face it, Jepsen did look pretty cute failing. At least she has that over Cincinnati mayor Mark Mallory, who in my mind still holds the record for worst first pitch ever. Though as you’ll see in this article, there are more than a few candidates.

Jepsen‘s pitch result was bad, but the mechanical flaws are easily correctable. Jepsen needs to have a longer stride to keep her back foot from pushing up. Plus, her elbow needs to be brought up slightly in order to direct the force towards home plate more than up. 

So Carly, don’t feel so bad. The pitch result was bad, but with a little work, we can have you throwing strikes in no time. Here’s my number, call me maybe

 

Will Carroll has been studying pitchers for over a decade. He wrote “Saving The Pitcher” in 2004 and has been part of the faculty at the ASMI Injuries in Baseball Course twice. He’s done similar mechanical analysis for MLB.com. All pictures in this taken directly from this YouTube video.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com



Tyler Pastornicky to Gwinnett: We’ll Miss the Atlanta Braves Slugger

When the Atlanta Braves took Brian McCann off the DL, they needed to clear a spot on the roster to make room for him. They decided to send infielder Tyler Pastornicky to the minors. I don’t understand why no one is talking about this move. While Tyler makes his way back to Gwinnett, let’s take a look at the stellar time he spent in Atlanta.

He was unable to win the backup infielder position in Spring Training. Braves management preferred the light-hitting Ramiro Pena instead. Even though Pastornicky spent time with Atlanta last year at shortstop and second base, he had to go back to Triple A. He promptly went down and hit .338, but the Braves didn’t have room for him to come up.

When Jason Heyward suddenly had an emergency appendectomy, he hit the DL and the Braves brought Pastornicky back up. Fans were enthused that this slugger was on his way back. Surely he would have a chip on his shoulder and continue his hot streak in the majors.

Pastornicky‘s 2013 stat line is quite memorable. He made appearances in six games, starting in one and coming in late as a defensive replacement in another. It will be tough to top his long one game hitting streak that ended near the end of April.

I’m sure we all remember the big plays Pastornicky made. Like that time he played second base against Detroit and delivered a big hit. It was a double in the second inning. Even though it was his only hit, he was left stranded and the Braves lost 8-3, Braves fans can’t forget that screaming liner down the right field line.

He even racked up one put out and two assists at second base. He took the team lead in defense, making no errors. Andrelton Simmons hopefully learned a lot from Pastornicky while they were in the clubhouse together.

The man many in Atlanta affectionately refer to as “Rev” should be turning heads soon in Gwinnett. Hopefully he’ll be on his way back to the bigs before we know it.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Fernando Rodney Reveals Power of His Lucky Plantain, World Cowers with Fear

The world doesn’t stand a chance when Fernando Rodney brings his lucky plantain to the ballpark. 

The Dominican Republic moved past the Netherlands Monday night and will now play in the World Baseball Classic final against Puerto Rico. 

Sure, you could give some of the credit to the timely hitting of Moises Sierra and Robinson Cano, but the real reason the Dominican Republic took the semifinal was the undeniable power of Fernando Rodney’s lucky plantain. 

The video (h/t Big Lead) features a stoic Rodney standing confident. Well, there is a reason he is so cool before the start of the game. He has a secret weapon, a lucky fruit that also talks to him. 

Here is more on this special and magical plantain from Yahoo! Sports:

It had a message for him, too, because what good is a piece of produce if it doesn’t talk to you? “If you keep me close to you,” the plantain said, according to Rodney, who did not indicate whether it spoke Spanish or English or maybe Fruitish, “you’re going to get the win.”

Sounds like Rodney’s plantain is a bit of a chatty Cathy. 

The powerful fruit arrived Monday afternoon via a special delivery from the Dominican Republic. Not being an expert on mystical good luck charms, I am not aware whether the plantain will still have enough mojo for the final against Puerto Rico. 

If the Dominican Republic does take the title, you can bet there will be crates of the stuff lying around the Tampa Bay locker room all season. 

Hit me up on Twitter for more good fortune. 


Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Top 25 Strangest Occurrences of MLB 2012 Season

With the conclusion of the 2012 MLB season just a month behind us, it’s about that time when all serious fans begin entering that annual November-December depression, as reality sets in that baseball is over.

They know from years of prior experience that the only true remedy for their no-baseball blues will be the beginning of the 2013 season. Yet, still they endlessly search through countless cable channels, looking for a baseball game to watch—any baseball game.

Unfortunately, they’re well aware that they’ll only find a periodic classic game rerun on the MLB Network or ESPN.

So until next season begins, we’ll have to relish the wonderful memories—like the San Francisco Giants dominating the 2012 World Series and claiming their second title in three years.

Now that all the individual awards have been handed out to their deserving recipients, let’s close this electrifying season with a look back at Major League Baseball’s Top 25 most unusual occurrences of 2012.

 

Please Note: Videos of each play are available on MLB.com. Bleacher Report and MLB.com are not partners so I could not embed the video into the slideshow; instead, I linked each video under the slideshow descriptions.

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Mets Sign Jamie Hoffmann, Brian Bixler and Carlos Torres

As the New York Mets continue to build a contender unmatched since perhaps the 1927 Yankees, rival teams and the National League in general quake in their collective boots as the team recently signed star power hitters Jamie Hoffmann and Brian Bixler, and potential perennial Cy Young winner Carlos Torres.

Those three players, complemented by lesser stars David Wright, R.A. Dickey and Ike Davis, ensure the Mets at least 120 victories in 2013. With the team jelling as it is, it might even exceed those admittedly low expectations and win at least 162 games, becoming the first baseball team to have a perfect season.

In fact, the rest of the league will probably lose count of its enormous number of wins and ungodly runs scored about a third of the way through the season. It’ll throw its arms up in surrender, grant them 175 victories and beg them for mercy during the rest of the season.

Let’s take a look at the raging behemoths of men and ballplayers the Mets signed over these past couple weeks.

First, it was Brian Bixler, who the team inked on November 16th. Knowing his signing was a coup, the Mets tried to keep the deal on the down-low by making it of the minor league variety. But we all know what that really means. It means the rest of the league will wish it was back in the minor leagues, so they don’t have to face the terrifying might of Bixler’s bat every single night.

It is said Bixler once ripped the spine out of a grizzly bear and surgically reattached it before the animal even knew what happened. He eats light bulbs for breakfast and his sweat is so pure and holy that it has been known to cure cancer, herpes and even the laziest of eyes. Don’t let Stuart Scott find out.

Officially, his age is 30, but some claim he may be only seven years old, that he came out of his mother’s womb fully matured, with a moustache, wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase.

His baseball career has been utterly stellar so far. His career batting average is listed at .189, but further research indicates that this is a clerical error and in fact the mark is .981. The statistician who made the mistake is no longer working for Major League Baseball. Some sources say he may no longer be alive.

He plays shortstop, outfield and third base, but only because he wants to. He could play all nine positions at once if he felt like it. In fact, he did so 14 games in a row while in Little League, so the legend goes. In those 14 games, he hit 1.423, with the opposing teams allowing him more base hits just to let the games end sooner so they didn’t have to keep losing.

His speed is legendary. He is credited with 156 career steals in the minor leagues, but it is believed he actually stole all those bases in his rookie professional season. To keep his better-than-Henderson-and-Coleman-and-Wills-and-Brock-combined wheels off the bases, professional baseball clandestinely paid him upwards of a billion dollars to let them spread that year’s steal total over the rest of his career to date, dividing it among his other seasons and giving him more human-looking numbers. But that agreement only runs through 2014. When it is up, be prepared.

Then the Mets signed outfielder Jamie Hoffmann, who may be even better than Bixler. He has appeared in only 16 major league games, but it’s not because of any sort of inferiority on his part—sources claim it is because Major League Baseball pitchers secretly petitioned the commissioner to force him to stay in the minor leagues. His mighty lumber alone, it is feared, could raise the league ERA over two points in a matter of weeks.

He doesn’t just swing a baseball bat, they say. He swings an entire acacia tree. He doesn’t just steal bases, they claim. He steals, them, pawns them off and donates all the money to a Third World charity. Then, before anyone can bat an eye, he replaces them with perfectly carved marble substitutes, masterpieces so glorious even Michelangelo weeps in his grave.

In 2009, he hit a single home run at the major league level—a deep shot in his first at-bat on May 24. It broke pitcher Matt Palmer’s heart and shattered his dreams. He left the game just a few short innings later and, it is said, took a long and lonely walk down the streets of Los Angeles, trying to find himself and reconcile what had happened just a few hours before.

He had been victimized by a Jamie Hoffmann blast so hard hit, no one knows just how far it really went. Some claim 350 feet. Others say 450. We may never really know, for those at that game on that warm California afternoon swear that as the ball was about to leave Dodger Stadium entirely, it suddenly vanished. At that same moment, perhaps a finger snap’s time later, a young boy in Ibusuki, Japan, was hit in the head by a baseball appearing seemingly from nowhere in the powder blue  sky.

Hoffmann is part man and part light and pure energy. He hits home runs and he swipes bases as any respectable ballplayer does, but he does both like no one else can. Or ever could.

It was not Babe Ruth hitting all those home runs in the 1920s and 1930s. It was Jamie Hoffmann’s transcendent soul and spirit travelling the waves and ripples of space-time, planting himself in the Bambino’s legendary lumber. Babe Ruth was Jamie Hoffmann…Jamie Hoffman was Babe Ruth.

And then there is pitcher Carlos Torres, perhaps the most human of the triumvirate. Modest and humble, the ever-decent human being that he is intends to have a high ERA. He prefers to allow near-innumerable home runs and walks. He wants his opposition to do well and have a good time.

“I do it on purpose,” he is reported to have once said. “I do it to be fair. It’s not fun constantly winning all the time. It gives me a challenge.”

From the beginning of his career, Torres has followed this legacy of gentlemanly fairness and decency. In 2004, his rookie professional season, he went 19-0 with a 0.00 ERA. But he asked—nay, he demanded—the league change his numbers to a more human and reasonable 2-2 with a 4.74 ERA. And to this day, that is what the record books say.

One source close to Torres tells us:  “He doesn’t want people to look at him as ‘Carlos Torres, that guy who once threw a ball 240 miles-per-hour, that guy who throws a changeup so slow he can walk to the batter’s box and hit a home run three minutes later. He wants people to look at him as Carlos Torres, the normal human being.”

Some may consider his modesty a weakness, one that may harm his teams in the long run. After all, his major league record is only 6-6 and his ERA is 5.97.

But for what he cannot do—or chooses not to do—on the mound, he makes up in the other facets of his incredible life.

Torres is a master of 18 languages, including three that are technically extinct. He paints masterpieces with his eyelashes, using only ground-up berries and pure cane sugar as his media. He once composed a sonata so beautiful it was made illegal in 86 countries. They feared cult-like religions would spring up around it.

If the pitcher ever ditches his modesty, however, the league better be prepared.

“He could be the greatest pitcher who ever lived,” one scout says. “I’ve seen this guy throw. He is an amalgam of all the best hurlers ever. He could win 30 games a year even if he doesn’t reach his full potential. If he does, I envision at least 500 strikeouts and a Cy Young Award each season.”

With the additions of Bixler, Hoffmann and Torres, the Mets have become the team to beat in 2013 and, perhaps, for decades to come. The squad now boasts a team loaded with power, speed, defensive versatility and incredible pitching—and that’s just in the recent signees.

In fact, the Mets temporarily considered dropping all the other players on the club and building the team entirely around the newly acquired trio. Bixler would have manned the infield, Hoffmann the outfield, and Torres would have pitched. Only when alerted that the official rules of baseball state nine players must be on the field defensively at all times did manager Terry Collins decide against the idea.

Perhaps it was for the better. Now the team can showcase its trade bait—that is, the rest of the squad—during the 2013 campaign, as it rides its way to a perfect season on the backs of these newly acquired stars.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Buster Posey: Top 5 Ways Giants’ MVP Can Make an Extra Buck

It’s time we find ways to market Buster Posey to the masses. 

He’s won Rookie of the Year, the Silver Slugger Award, the Hank Aaron Award, and this year’s batting title, Comeback Player of the Year.

Also, he started an All-Star game, won two World Series, and is now the National League Most Valuable Player.  

Yes, he’s that good, and he’s only 25-years-old!

Still, outside of Northern California, Posey receives little publicity. 

He doesn’t play in a typical ESPN market (e.g. Boston or New York), so he’s largely ignored by the national sports media. 

Fortunately, name recognition can grow quickly with the right publicity, so here are the top-five ways to market Buster Posey to the rest of America.  

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8 Rules for Masterful Heckling

The best Masterful Hecklers can actually affect the outcome of a game. If one desires to Heckle, this is the desired result. A Masterful Heckler will throw off the other team, and inspire his own, while making everybody laugh.

A Failed Heckler is mocked, scorned, jeered, disrespected and even tossed from the game.

Baseball players are the most heckled athletes alive, and they have heard it all. A successful heckle will have a visible effect on the player. Some use them as fuel to excel, others may get flustered and miss a play.

But what are the guidelines for Heckling? How does one tell the difference between what is appropriate and entertaining, and what is only annoying. Here are some dos and don’ts for aspiring Hecklers that will help them reach Masterful status, with some stories to illustrate.

Keep in mind these guidelines are specific for a baseball game, but with slight modifications, these rules will work elsewhere as well.

Begin Slideshow


Great Moments in Steroid Scandals: The Baltimore B-12 Blunder

After Melky Cabrera’s shoddy webmaster skills died a timely death, I started thinking about past ruses of steroid explanation. 

Instant comedy seems to be born every time a baseball player is accused or caught red-handed in using performance-enhancing drugs.  Some dopey anecdote is concocted, and the authorities and the fans are supposed to blindly buy it.

So, without further adieu, here is the first installment of “Great Moments in Steroid Scandals.”

“Let me start by telling you this: I have never used steroids, period. I don’t know how to say it any more clearly than that. Never.”

You remember that one, right

Orioles first baseman Rafael Palmeiro looked into the eyes of Congress, wagged his sanctimonious finger and affirmed to the world he wasn’t dirty.

His adamancy spoke volumes, as his performance in Washington was actually worthy of Tinseltown.  The only enhancers Raffy ever took were Viagra pills—and he was paid to tell us that.

But only 135 days after Palmeiro’s fire-and-brimstone speech of innocence, he tested positive for the powerful and MLB-banned supplement stanozolol.  Subsequently, he was suspended for 10 games (the ban at the time in 2005).

So, let’s try this again.

“I have never intentionally used steroids. Never. Ever. Period. Ultimately, although I never intentionally put a banned substance into my body, the independent arbitrator ruled that I had to be suspended under the terms of the program.”

After this statement of desperation, he was mum to the public about his positive test.  But ESPN soon learned that Palmeiro, when talking to an MLB arbitration panel, threw his teammate Miguel Tejada under a massive bus.  He claimed Tejada had given him a dreaded B-12 pill that logically must have been tainted.

With Tejada having his steroid transgressions as well, the case simply looked like a juiced guy trying to save his hide on the laurels of another juiced guy.

Because both guys were dirty, their stories weren’t believable, and the mystery B-12 pill never did any real damage.  Sure, Tejada was convicted of perjury for lying to Congress about Raffy’s checkered steroid past, but it was a minor violation that did no real damage.

As for Palmeiro and that completely legal pill that somehow caused a positive test for an extremely dangerous steroid, well he’s sticking to his story.

In 2006, he told the Baltimore Sun, “Yes sir, that’s what happened. It’s not a story; it’s the reality of what happened,” and “I said what I said before Congress because I meant every word of it.”

I apologize for asking such a silly question, but if Palmeiro regularly took B-12 pills, then why didn’t he buy his own pills?

  Appeared originally on Sporting Sarcasm

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Matt Joyce Broke Tampa Bay Rays Teammate’s Bat After Hitting Home Run with It

Elliot Johnson should think twice before letting Matt Joyce borrow his stuff.

During the first inning of what turned out to be a 12-6 slaughter of the Minnesota Twins, Joyce stepped to the plate and hit a nice two-run home run. The hit scored the first two runs of the game and served as the warning shot of the ambush to come.

The homer was also hit with Elliot Johnson’s bat.

If you look closely at the picture above, you will see that Joyce was using a bat with the No. 9 on the knob of the bat, not his jersey No. 20.

Having nothing else planned on a Friday night I began to research into the origin and proper owner of the bat. Unfortunately, the number on the knob doesn’t come with an underline like my favorite card game to differentiate the nines from sixes. However, with the jersey number six belonging to Rays third base coach Tom Foley, it was safe to assume the bat didn’t belong to him.

That left the only option as No. 9 himself, Mr. Elliot Johnson. After posing the question on my Twitter, because I clearly wasn’t sleeping without confirmation, Johnson responded and confirmed via Twitter that the bat was indeed his.

Johnson also added that Joyce broke the bat, but it’s cool since a homer was hit with it.

We’ve all been there in principal. You let someone borrow a tool, appliance or other object and they don’t return it in the condition they received it. The difference is my neighbor isn’t hitting a two-run homer with my hammer or lawn mower.

 

Jamal Wilburg is a Featured Columnist for Bleacher Report.

Like him on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @JWilburg or visit his website www.jamalwilburg.com.

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