How
Substances Impact Spin Rate
Spin Rate has received a lot of buzz
lately in the baseball world. It plays a
huge role in how pitches move. What do
we know as of now? Naturally, gravity pulls a pitch down as it travels towards
home plate. The spin rate helps to
either defy or help this gravitational pull. 4 seam fastballs have a lot of
backspin, which without gravity, would pull the ball upwards. As the ball is cutting through the air, high
spin rate fastballs aren’t impacted as much by gravity as low spin rate
fastballs. High spin rate fastballs can
give the illusion of rising. Low spin
rate fastballs are pulled down much faster so they drop, or sink much
more. With a curveball, it’s basically the
opposite. A curveball has top spin, so
the ball will pull downward. A high spin
rate curveball aids in this downward pull more than a low spin rate curveball,
so in theory, it will have more vertical break.
Spin rate alone doesn’t tell the whole story; but generally speaking,
you want a curveball to have a high spin rate.
Fastballs are a little trickier.
Both high and low spin rates can work effectively. You just have to understand your
arsenal. High spin rate fastballs tend
to produce more fly balls and strikeouts, whereas low spin rate fastballs tend
to produce more ground balls. If you
have a low spin rate fastball, it might not be in your best interest to pitch
up in the zone. If you have a high spin
rate fastball, it might be very important for you to pitch up in the zone. For reference, average 4 seam fastball spin
rates in Major League Baseball for the 2015 season was 2,226 RPM. Average curveball spin rate was 2,308
RPM.
An interesting discussion surrounding
spin rate is what can be done to increase or decrease spin to make the ball
move a little more. Earlier this year,
things got a little intense on Twitter about substances being used by pitchers
in Major League Baseball. It’s been well
known that pitchers have used substances for a while, but until recently, there
hasn’t been any way to test just how impactful certain substances are. Naturally, I decided to test out the effects.
Using Pitch Tracker from Diamond
Kinetics, I have conducted experiments using myself and a few other high school
pitchers to see what happens when different substances are used. For the initial
experiment, I used sunscreen, spray, baby powder and gum from a Blow Pop. I
only threw 4 seam fastballs. Here are the average results:
Substance
|
Spin
|
Velocity
|
RPM Change from Normal
|
MPH Change from Normal
|
None
|
1,946 RPM
|
86.7 MPH
|
||
Sunscreen
|
1,719 RPM
|
85.3 MPH
|
-227 RPM
|
-1.4 MPH
|
Baby Powder
|
1,823 RPM
|
86.9 MPH
|
-123 RPM
|
+0.2 MPH
|
Spray
|
1,721 RPM
|
86.8 MPH
|
-225 RPM
|
+0.1 MPH
|
Gum (Blow Pop)
|
2,457 RPM
|
89.0 MPH
|
+511 RPM
|
+2.3 MPH
|
From the chart, it’s very safe to
say that substances will absolutely impact spin. How much is pretty impressive. From a personal standpoint, I would never try
using sunscreen by itself. I had no idea
where the ball was going with that. What
happened with the Blow Pop was absurd.
The impact that sort of increase could have for a pitcher is huge. Major League hitters hit, on average, .280 on
fastball spin rates between 2,000 and 2,299 RPM. I’m sure this will be fairly linear, meaning
that guys probably hit closer to .300 near 2,000 and are probably down closer
to .250 around 2,299. I don’t have any
stats to back up that claim, but that’s just my guess. Obviously, we aren’t working with MLB average
velocity, but this will give you a pretty good idea of what the impact will
look like. When fastballs reach 2,600
RPM, hitters hit just .213. If we take
average spin (roughly 2,250 RPM to work with an even number) and increase that
by just 350 RPM, we are now at 2,600.
What do you think would happen if you added another 161 RPM to
that? Again, I don’t have the stats for
that, but I would feel confident in saying that guys would hit below .200 on
average off of that. This could potentially
have huge impacts on a pitchers performance.
With the success of the gum from the
Blow Pop, I decided that I had to test out, not only more brands of gum, but
more sticky substances. The next thing I
tested out was a Tootsie Roll Pop. I conducted
this experiment on myself and 2 high school pitchers. Fastballs are Curveballs for this one:
Substance
|
Pitch Type
|
Spin Rate
|
Velo
|
+/- Spin
|
+/- Velo
|
|
Player A
|
None
|
Fastball
|
2,057 RPM
|
90.4 MPH
|
||
Player A
|
None
|
Curveball
|
2,115 RPM
|
71.5 MPH
|
||
Player A
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Fastball
|
2,392 RPM
|
90.5 MPH
|
+335 RPM
|
+0.1 MPH
|
Player A
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Curveball
|
2,430 RPM
|
75.8 RPM
|
+315 RPM
|
+4.3 MPH
|
Substance
|
Pitch Type
|
Spin Rate
|
Velo
|
+/- Spin
|
+/- Velo
|
|
Player B
|
None
|
Fastball
|
1,957 RPM
|
86.0 MPH
|
||
Player B
|
None
|
Curveball
|
2,269 RPM
|
73.8 MPH
|
||
Player B
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Fastball
|
1,533 RPM
|
84.5 MPH
|
-424 RPM
|
-1.5 MPH
|
Player B
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Curveball
|
2,567 RPM
|
75.3 MPH
|
+298 RPM
|
+1.5 MPH
|
Substance
|
Pitch Type
|
Spin Rate
|
Velo
|
+/- Spin
|
+/- Velo
|
|
Player C
|
None
|
Fastball
|
2,035 RPM
|
81.4 MPH
|
||
Player C
|
None
|
Curveball
|
1,951 RPM
|
66.4 MPH
|
||
Player C
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Fastball
|
2,073 RPM
|
84.2 MPH
|
+38 RPM
|
+2.8 MPH
|
Player C
|
Tootsie Roll Pop
|
Curveball
|
2,566 RPM
|
72.0 MPH
|
+615 RPM
|
+5.6 MPH
|
After
conducting the first experiment, I hypothesized that sticky substance’s would
increase spin rate across the board. The
numbers above destroy that hypothesis with a fastball anyways. If you look at the charts above for fastballs,
something different happened for all 3 guys.
Player A’s velocity remained the same while spin rate increased significantly. Player B’s velocity dropped some but his spin
rate plummeted, which was truly shocking (that also has huge potential
implications). Player C saw a jump in
velocity without really seeing a notable difference in spin rate. When we look at curveballs, spin rate increased
across the board.
So
what can we take away from these experiments so far? Not a ton.
What is clear is that substances do impact spin. What isn’t clear is how a particular
substance will affect an individual’s spin.
It appears as though sticky, sugary substances will increase breaking
ball spin, but not necessarily fastball spin.
Like most everything else, the impacts are going to be different from
individual to individual.