Screwball

This article is about the baseball pitch. For other uses, see Screwball (disambiguation).

A screwball (also known as the screwgie), is a baseball pitch that is thrown so as to break in the opposite direction of a slider or curveball. Depending on the pitcher's arm angle, the ball may also have a sinking action.

Carl Hubbell was one of the most renowned screwball pitchers in the history of Major League Baseball.[1] Hubbell was known as the "scroogie king" for his mastery of the pitch and the frequency for which he threw it. Other famous screwball artists include Tug McGraw and Cy Young Award winners Mike Cuellar, Fernando Valenzuela and Mike Marshall.

Effects

When thrown by a right-handed pitcher, a screwball breaks from left to right from the point of view of the pitcher; the pitch therefore moves down and in on a right-handed batter and down and away from a left-handed batter. When thrown by a left-handed pitcher, a screwball breaks from right to left, moving down and in on a left-handed batter and down and away from a right-handed batter. Due to this left-to-right movement of the ball (when thrown by a right-handed pitcher), right-handed pitchers use a screwball against left-handed batters in the same way that they use a slider against right-handed batters. If thrown correctly, the screwball breaks in the opposite direction of a curveball.

Pitchers

One of the first great screwball pitchers was Christy Mathewson, who pitched for the New York Giants 1900–1916, whose pitch was then labeled as the "fadeaway"; although historians have been unable to prove it, baseball legend holds that Giants manager John McGraw arranged for Black pitcher Rube Foster to teach Mathewson the screwball, as McGraw was forbidden from hiring Foster directly.[2] Major league pitchers who have thrown the screwball during their careers include:

Contrary to popular belief, the screwball is not particularly stressful on a pitcher's arm.[12] The pronation of the forearm allows for the protection of the ulnar collateral ligament, which is replaced during Tommy John surgery.

References

  1. "Carl Hubbell". Baseball-Reference.com. Retrieved 2000-2010. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  2. Burns, Ken (19 September 1994). "Inning Two: Something Like a War". Baseball. PBS.
  3. "Hubbell Out For Season", New York Times, August 24, 1938, pg. 26.
  4. "Blanton, Pirates, Stops Dodgers, 8-2", New York Times, May 19, 1935, pg. S5.
  5. "Arroyo: Artist of Yankee Bullpen", New York Times, August 21, 1960, pg. S2.
  6. "Orioles Get Baldschun of Phillies", New York Times, December 7, 1965, pg. 61.
  7. "Shrine of the Eternals 2006 Induction Day Photos". Baseballreliquary.org. 2006-07-23. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  8. "Roundup: Cuellar Holds Showing of Old Art Form", New York Times, June 12, 1970, pg. 43.
  9. "Peter Gammons". Espn.go.com. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  10. "The Herrera Screwball". Fox Sports. Retrieved 2012-11-07.
  11. "Unheralded Braden keeps making us believe this is his defining year". Sports Illustrated. May 10, 2010.
  12. Schoenfeld, Bruce (July 10, 2014). "The Mystery of the Vanishing Screwball". New York Times.