National Post

MLB clubs turn to tech to get a competitiv­e edge

- Ronald Blum

TAMPA, FLA. •Nestorcort­es got behind the plate in a batting cage and watched an eight-foot-high, 1,200-pound robot spit out fastballs, cutters and sweepers just like the ones spinning off the fingertips of his left hand.

“It was like seeing myself pitch. That was crazy,” the New York Yankees All-star left-hander said.

Technology has come a long way.

The Trajekt Arc pitching machine uses baseball’s high-tech data to mimic the way balls break from every big league pitcher and has been approved by Major League Baseball for in-game use this year in batting cages. Using video of deliveries and data, the robot allows a hitter to step in against recreated offerings from any pitcher he wants to face. Dodgers twoway star Shohei Ohtani said he used Trajekt to view his pitches from a different vantage point.

“You’re training their brain. You’re training their eyes,” Philadelph­ia hitting coach Kevin Long said.

Each machine costs US$15,000 to $20,000 a month as part of a three-year lease, an unimaginab­le leap forward from the pitching gun invented by Princeton mathematic­s professor Charles Howard Hinton in 1896 that looked like a 21/2-foot-long cannon.

Paul Giovagnoli turned the concept into a business. He owned golf driving ranges in Wichita and Topeka, Kan., wanted to add baseball and created what became known as the Iron Mike. Giovagnoli founded Master Pitching Machine in 1952, and its units with long metal arms became omnipresen­t throughout the majors.

By the mid-1970s, machines with spinning wheels entered the market, the better to replicate breaking balls, and the Yankees had three at $1,600 each at spring training in 1978.

Those models have gone the way of flannel uniforms.

Spinball Sports’ ipitch Smart Machine retails for $14,000 and is programmed with 16 built-in pitchers with 140 pitches. Company sales manager Sam Root says there are more than 100 of its ipitch machines among 27 MLB teams and units are at 15 Division I college conference­s.

Sportsatta­ck’s Elite ehack Attack comes with fastballs, changeups, split-fingers and right and left curveballs and sliders, and allows customized pitches and storage for 20 favourites. It retails for $14,999.

Joshua Pope took it a step further. He was a senior at Tanenbaumc­hat high school in Toronto in 2014 and was talking with friends about how many swings it would take for them to get a hit off Marcus Stroman, then a top Toronto Blue Jays rookie. Having had a couple shoulder surgeries, Pope knew his career wouldn’t be as an athlete. He applied to the University of Waterloo in Ontario in part because John Mcphee, a mechanical engineerin­g professor there, had developed a hockey slapshot robot.

“We had a theoretica­l modelling approach to how we could create a machine to replicate gyro spin,” Pope said.

Data was publicly available. MLB installed Sportvisio­n’s PITCHF/X in 2006 and then its more detailed Statcast system for 2015, which runs on Hawk-eye data. All teams get Hawkeye, and some now supplement it with informatio­n from Kinatrax Motion Capture, Simi Reality Motion Systems and DARI Motion.

During his five-year college program, Pope received a grant of $60,000 and raised financing to built a prototype. He became CEO of the new company founded in 2019 and recruited Rowan Ferrabee, a Waterloo mechatroni­cs engineerin­g student, to be chief technology officer. They originally called their firm Simulatepr­o but changed it to Trajekt Sports — Traject with a normal spelling was taken and they liked the K because of its use for strikeouts in baseball scoring.

Working at Velocity, a startup hub in Kitchener, Ont., from April 2019 to March 2020 — and then in the garage of Pope’s parents after the pandemic began — they developed a machine that controls 11 of 12 degrees of freedom for pitches, maintainin­g only a fixed release point of 561/2 feet from the plate.

They presented a demo of the ball inserter and user interface at the 2019 winter meetings, and Chicago Cubs director of Innovation Bobby Basham agreed to a three-week spring training trial in 2021.

Trajekt reached deals for seven teams in 2022 and now has 20 teams with about 45 machines — including a club in Japan that started last season. Until this year, MLB limited use to before and after games.

MLB began regulating on-field technology in 2016 and has approved six products for in-game, on-field use this year: 4D Motion’s kinematic/movement tracker, Catapult’s GPS tracker, Statsports’ GPS tracker and Pulse’s Motus Sleeve, which measures biomechani­cs and heart monitors from WHOOP and Zephyr.

In addition, two bat sensors from Blast Motion and two from Diamond Kinetics are approved for onfield use during workouts.

 ?? GEORGE WALKER IV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Trajekt Arc pitching machine, created by former University of Waterloo engineerin­g student Joshua Pope,
uses MLB’S own data to simulate real pitches.
GEORGE WALKER IV / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Trajekt Arc pitching machine, created by former University of Waterloo engineerin­g student Joshua Pope, uses MLB’S own data to simulate real pitches.

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