Baseball is one of the most popular games in the US, including soccer and basketball. Fans across the country enjoy baseball and ardently follow the MLB. However, currently, the league is going through a lockout after the agreement between players and the owners expired in December 2021.
Baseball is already one of the toughest games to play, but if a submarine pitcher comes to the forefront, the difficulty for the batters increases even more; especially for left-handed batters.
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What is a Submarine pitcher in Baseball?
In baseball, a submarine pitcher is the one who releases the ball just above the ground, but not underhand. A submarine pitcher has to bend their torso at a right angle and tilt his soldiers so severely that he can rotate around a nearly horizontal axis. While for the underhand softball pitches, it is just the opposite. The pitchers have to position their torso just upright, the shoulders should be at level, and the hips cannot be rotated.
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For submarine pitchers, gravity also plays a very important role in their upside-down releases. This rare style of pitching causes balls to move differently from pitches generated by the other arm slots. For submarine pitchers, they have to throw the balls sufficiently above the strike zone.
Are there any submarine pitchers in MLB?
It’s a rare sight to see a submarine pitcher in MLB, because of their unusual and unique technique. Most of the pitchers use overarm motion to throw the ball because the submarine motion is not a natural style of throwing.
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Even though submarine pitchers are very rare to find, MLB has witnessed some of the greatest submarine pitchers. Carl Mays, Ted Abernathy, Mark Eichhorn, and Gene Garber are a few of those.
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Currently, Adam Cimber of Toronto Blue Jays, Darren O’Day of New York Yankees, and George Wyatt Mills of Seattle Mariners are a few of the submarine pitchers in MLB.