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Driveline In The News

Pablo López, Joe Ryan Getting Even Better Results in Second Year With New Pitches

New Pitch: Sweeper – After trading for López, the Twins’ brass quickly approached him with a proposition. Adding a sweeper, they believed, could vault him from a mid-rotation starter to one of the game’s best. He soaked up all the information and got to work. López introduced his sweeper last season and threw it the second-most of any of his pitches (21.4 %). Batters posted a .173 BA and a .265 xSLG against it, with a 36.6 Whiff% and a 22.8 Put Away%. After the best season of his career, he wasn’t satisfied and headed to Driveline this winter to work on taking the next step…Read More

Joe Ryan

New Pitch: Splitter – López wasn’t the only Twins pitcher with a new pitch last season. Ryan has been a fastball-first pitcher throughout his professional career, because of the unique arm angle derived from his background in water polo. He was able to dominate the upper minors with fastballs in the upper part of the zone, but that doesn’t work at the big-league level. Ryan has seen his fastball usage drop from over 60% in 2022 to just under 45% in 2024, thanks to his splitter usage. Last season, opponents hit .242 against it with a .409 xSLG, 21.3 Whiff%, and 16.8 Put Away %. Some of his numbers from last season are also slightly skewed because…Read More

The overload-underload training Driveline popularized for pitchers is now part of its program for batters who want to hit the ball harder, and for two days, Arenado took swings with all three bats, as well as his Marucci counterweight-knob custom piece.
Blast Motion sensors were affixed to all three to track bat speed. After every swing, Arenado could see how fast his bat was moving. If the swing felt right and the speed was good, he could bank it mentally as the sort of swing he wanted to repeat. If the feeling or speed were off, he could ditch it. The feedback loop grew tighter, allowing Arenado to grow more comfortable with his best swing.
By Driveline’s estimation, 1 mph gained in bat speed equals about 1.2 mph more in exit velocity…Read More

How St. Louis Cardinal Star Nolan
Arenado Found the Baseball Fountain of Youth

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ offseason secret
weapon? Weighted bats

Frustration, though, can often trigger curiosity. And so there was Betts, joining Max Muncy, J.D. Martinez, Gavin Lux and at least a couple of other teammates who took part in Driveline’s weighted-bat program, developed to increase bat speed…Read More

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