My thoughts on Clippard
Posted: Mon May 21, 2007 4:19 am
First of all, what impressed me more than any curveball he threw was his confidence. From the first pitch he was walking around with his head high and great body language, he didn't look overwhelmed for one second. He has great poise on the mound which you don't see in young pitchers, which is what also separates Hughes from most young pitchers.
He was true to form with his impeccable control. Whether it was a fastball on the corner or a curveball in the dirt, he put the ball exactly where he wanted to. He missed badly with only two pitches, one being the home run to Wright and the other being a hanging curve that Beltran popped up.
The knock on Clippard is that he doesn't throw very hard, but that is an overrated part of the game. You only need to throw hard if you can't locate your fastball or if you have no secondary stuff...guys such as Glavine and Moose have proven that for years. Scouts get so caught up in how hard prospects throw, but they overlook the other things sometimes. When you are throwing such sharp breaking balls and a great change, the 90 mph fastball ends up looking like 95. He blew a 90 mph fastball by Delgado up in the zone, which was preceeded by a curveball in the dirt. If you change the hitter's eye level and pitch speed, as well as arm angles, you will succeed.
As everybody knew before tonight, his secondary stuff is filthy. His curve is extremely sharp and breaks late, which forces hitters to take weak swings which we saw all night. There were about 10 check swings on his curve.
I hope he can be in our rotation for a while, if not now then in the future. He is going to be a very good pitcher in this league and I can see him becoming a #2 pitcher one day if all goes well.
He was true to form with his impeccable control. Whether it was a fastball on the corner or a curveball in the dirt, he put the ball exactly where he wanted to. He missed badly with only two pitches, one being the home run to Wright and the other being a hanging curve that Beltran popped up.
The knock on Clippard is that he doesn't throw very hard, but that is an overrated part of the game. You only need to throw hard if you can't locate your fastball or if you have no secondary stuff...guys such as Glavine and Moose have proven that for years. Scouts get so caught up in how hard prospects throw, but they overlook the other things sometimes. When you are throwing such sharp breaking balls and a great change, the 90 mph fastball ends up looking like 95. He blew a 90 mph fastball by Delgado up in the zone, which was preceeded by a curveball in the dirt. If you change the hitter's eye level and pitch speed, as well as arm angles, you will succeed.
As everybody knew before tonight, his secondary stuff is filthy. His curve is extremely sharp and breaks late, which forces hitters to take weak swings which we saw all night. There were about 10 check swings on his curve.
I hope he can be in our rotation for a while, if not now then in the future. He is going to be a very good pitcher in this league and I can see him becoming a #2 pitcher one day if all goes well.