Put your middle finger on the horseshoe seam with index finger pionted toward target throw and twist your wrist so ur thum goes up and index down
Four seam Fastball, curveball, change up
A curveball is a type of pitch in baseball that actually curves as it reaches home plate. A curveball is not a good pitch for young children to throw, because to throw a curveball, you must flick your wrist, which is not good for a young child's wrist. There have been debates on whether a curveball actually curves, or if the pitch actually curves when it reaches the plate. Some nicknames for a curveball are "the bender," "the hook," "Uncle Charlie," "the hammer," "the yakker," "Public Enemy Number 1," or "a breaking pitch."
there is a splitter, a curveball, and just a plain old regular throw
the stitching on a baseball is there so you can throw different pitches such as a curveball. The stiches make the ball move different ways depending on how u grip it and how you throw it
four seam fastball, slider, curveball
Mike Minor: Atlanta Braves SP Pitches: Fastball, Slider, Curveball, Change-up
a curveball, slider, fastball,knuckleball,4seam fastball,changeup What about a knucklecurve, a palmball, slurve, circlechange, and a 2seamer
93 to 95 mph fastball with an 83 mph 1 to 7 curveball also a 85mph changeup
The best time to throw the curve is when you have two strikes on a batter. If you have good enough control on the pitch you can throw it more often. If you dont have a lot of control avoid throwing it with 3 balls and/or baserunners on.
Fastball, Curveball, Changeup, Slider, Cutter, 2-Seamer. In his prime his fastball was about 92-93 MPH. His big, 12-6 curve was the what he was famous for....during the late 90s it was probably the best curveball in the game. His threw it about 70 MPH. The rest of his pitches were pretty average, but his fastball and that curveball were more than enough.
Curveball - informant - was born in 1968.
sandy kofaux was the first to perfect the curveball