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Pitching with both hands?

doubledragondoubledragon Posts: 23,269 ✭✭✭✭✭

Check out this video of a guy that can pitch with both hands. Is this common, have you ever seen this before?

Comments

  • 2dueces2dueces Posts: 6,447 ✭✭✭✭✭

    That’s the kid I mentioned in the other thread. Great glove.

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  • craig44craig44 Posts: 11,244 ✭✭✭✭✭

    yes, an old red sox alum Greg Harris was a switch pitcher. He actually performed the feat in 1995 with the expos. he had a special 6 fingered glove that could be worn on either hand

    George Brett, Roger Clemens and Tommy Brady.

  • craig44craig44 Posts: 11,244 ✭✭✭✭✭

    also, the greatest baseball player of all time, George brett, could throw with either hand. he played third base right-handed and at the end of his career he played first base left-handed.

    He was also known to throw batting practice both right and left-handed.

    I would like to see Mike Schmidt try that!!

    George Brett, Roger Clemens and Tommy Brady.

  • DarinDarin Posts: 7,070 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @craig44 said:
    also, the greatest baseball player of all time, George brett, could throw with either hand. he played third base right-handed and at the end of his career he played first base left-handed.

    He was also known to throw batting practice both right and left-handed.

    I would like to see Mike Schmidt try that!!

    Are you sure about that Craig? I had always heard he threw pretty well left handed and did throw batting practice
    at times left handed but I never knew he played first base left handed.
    Maybe a little known fact about Brett..... he used to imitate Yaz's stance when he first came up,
    until Charley Lau started working with him.


  • jay0791jay0791 Posts: 3,528 ✭✭✭✭

    There has been major leaguers pitching with both hands.
    One even did a doubleheader.

    Didn't know that about Brett Thanks

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  • 1948_Swell_Robinson1948_Swell_Robinson Posts: 1,923 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited May 3, 2021 4:51AM

    Paul O'Neill is the only baseball player to have kicked left footed, lol: Check it out on baseball reference next to Bats Left, Throws left....:

    https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/o/o'neipa01.shtml

  • craig44craig44 Posts: 11,244 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Darin said:

    @craig44 said:
    also, the greatest baseball player of all time, George brett, could throw with either hand. he played third base right-handed and at the end of his career he played first base left-handed.

    He was also known to throw batting practice both right and left-handed.

    I would like to see Mike Schmidt try that!!

    Are you sure about that Craig? I had always heard he threw pretty well left handed and did throw batting practice
    at times left handed but I never knew he played first base left handed.
    Maybe a little known fact about Brett..... he used to imitate Yaz's stance when he first came up,
    until Charley Lau started working with him.


    well, maybe. I got it from a website about ambidextrous players.

    Brett was well known for pitching both left- and right-handed in batting practice. He also threw both left- and right-handed in the field – right as a 3rd baseman and left as a 1st baseman.
    George Fills the Royals' Flush (SI Vault, June 21, 1976)

    I have read, that if he didn't actually play lefthanded during games that he would take infield earlier in his career and play first lefthanded in practice.

    George Brett, Roger Clemens and Tommy Brady.

  • Alfonz24Alfonz24 Posts: 3,101 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Pat Venditte Rule

    It is a rare instance, indeed, when a first-year professional ballplayer inspires the creation of a new rule. But ambidextrous pitcher Pat Venditte has done just that.
    Venditte, the 20th-round pick of the New York Yankees in this June's Draft, received national attention after making his debut with the Staten Island Yankees June 19. With two outs and a runner on first in the bottom of the ninth inning, switch-hitter Ralph Henriquez came to the plate representing the Brooklyn Cyclones' last hope. What resulted was a moment of high comedy: Henriquez entered the batters box batting right-handed, so Venditte switched his glove to his left hand. Henriquez then decided to bat lefty, so Venditte switched his glove back to his right.

    And on and on it went. After a prolonged delay, Henriquez was ordered to bat right-handed. He then struck out on four pitches to end the ballgame.

    In order to avoid such incidents in the future, the Professional Baseball Umpire Corporation (PBUC) released its official rules for dealing with ambidextrous pitchers on Wednesday. These guidelines were reached after PBUC staff consulted with a variety of sources, including the Major League Baseball Rules Committee.

    At the heart of the new guidelines is the following provision:

    The pitcher must visually indicate to the umpire, batter and runner(s) which way he will begin pitching to the batter. Engaging the rubber with the glove on a particular hand is considered a definitive commitment to which arm he will throw with. The batter will then choose which side of the plate he will bat from.

    "The basis for the rule is that everything the batter does, he does so knowing what hand the pitcher is going to throw with," explained PBUC executive director Justin Klemm. "He may not know what type of pitch is going to be thrown, or its location, but he does know which arm will be used. A manager selects a pinch-hitter based on that knowledge, and that is also how a switch-hitter determines which side of the plate he is going to bat from."

    The guidelines also permit both the batter and pitcher to change positions (from right-handed to left-handed or vice versa) once per at-bat.

    "We don't anticipate that being an issue, but official playing rules allow that to happen in a normal situation," said Klemm. "Not allowing it to happen in situations involving an ambidextrous pitcher would be going against a previously established rule."

    Like virtually all baseball rules, these "Venditte Guidelines" are sure to spark some arguments regarding their fairness to both batter and pitcher.

    "That's the way it is in baseball. Very few rules are airtight, where there's no room for debate," said Klemm. "This will create some interesting conversations, and that's fine. Our primary goal was simply to be as fair as possible to everyone involved."

    The new rules regarding ambidextrous pitchers are as follows:

    The pitcher must visually indicate to the umpire, batter and runner(s) which way he will begin pitching to the batter. Engaging the rubber with the glove on a particular hand is considered a definitive commitment to which arm he will throw with. The batter will then choose which side of the plate he will bat from.
    The pitcher must throw one pitch to the batter before any "switch" by either player is allowed.
    After one pitch is thrown, the pitcher and batter may each change positions one time per at-bat. For example, if the pitcher changes from right-handed to left-handed and the batter then changes batter's boxes, each player must remain that way for the duration of that at-bat (unless the offensive team substitutes a pinch hitter, and then each player may again "switch" one time).
    Any switch (by either the pitcher or the batter) must be clearly indicated to the umpire.
    There will be no warm-up pitches during the change of arms.
    If an injury occurs the pitcher may change arms but not use that arm again during the remainder of the game.

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