Toronto Star

MLB: Tech has caught up to pitchers’ velocity, creating speed bump

- JAKE SEINER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— The scoreboard at Citi Field showed Jacob deGrom hitting 98 m.p.h., and the ballpark buzzed with the Mets star back in top form.

In Seattle, fans surely thought the same when Felix Hernandez’s fastball ticked up on opening day. And how about that extra juice from Detroit ace Justin Verlander?

All across the majors, pitchers are ramping up the velocity this season — or at least it seems that way.

Not so fast. They’re actually getting a little help: Major League Baseball has changed how it records and reports pitch speeds, driving up readings all over the league.

After previously using PITCHf/x to provide velocities to broadcasts and ballparks, Major League Baseball Advanced Media is instead supplying numbers from its Statcast system. The key difference is that PITCHf/x calculates velocity at a set point — usually 50 or 55 feet from the back of home plate — while Statcast mea- sures it out of the pitcher’s hand.

Because of that difference, Statcast readings are faster than PITCHf/x by about 0.6 m.p.h. on average, according to MLBAM senior data architect Tom Tango.

“We do have the technology to capture the speed right out of the hand now,” Tango told The Associated Press. “So that’s what we report.”

Trouble is, for now, fans and analysts aren’t necessaril­y comparing apples to apples on pitch speeds from last year.

For example, PITCHf/x had deGrom averaging 93.4 m.p.h. on his fourseam fastball during an injury plagued 2016 season. On Wednesday, Statcast measured him at 94.2 m.p.h., a bump deGrom noticed during the game.

“Last year, it felt like all I could do to get to 93 or 94,” deGrom said.

On Wednesday, he got there no problem, but that 0.8 m.p.h. uptick might be mostly because of the new readings. The same may be true for Hernandez (up 0.7 m.p.h. on four- seamers from 2016’s PITCHf/x to 2017’s Statcast data), Verlander (up 0.8 m.p.h.) and Stephen Strasburg (up 0.9 m.p.h.). Conversely, Arizona’s Zack Greinke (down 0.1 m.p.h.) might not be holding as steady as it seems.

What does all that mean? For the average fan, perhaps a few more triple-digit fastballs at the stadium.

For the sabermetri­cs community, it’s an effort to get everyone using the same data.

“We’re standardiz­ing so we all see the same,” Tango said.

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