Knuckler getting close to extinction
Boston’s Wright lone MLB pitcher still using it
The tight-knit knuckleball community includes Hall of Famer Phil Niekro, 2012 National League Cy Young Award winner R.A. Dickey and two-time World Series champion Tim Wakefield.
They showed that, if mastered, the pitch is one of the most effective in baseball, nearly impossible to hit. Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Willie Stargell, a Hall of Famer, once compared its flight to “a butterfly with hiccups.”
But coaches and knuckleballers believe the pitch may be nearing extinction.
Forever underestimated, never fully embraced on the instructional level and long an option of last resort for struggling pitchers, the knuckleball has always been somewhat rare. Its peak came in the 1970 season, when seven majorleague practitioners of the floating, fluttering slow ball combined to earn 47 wins and 44 saves.
But last year, just 727 knuckleballs were thrown in the majors, the fewest since the statistic was first tracked by Baseball Savant in 2008, and that number could dwarf this year’s total.
Boston Red Sox right-hander Steven Wright is the only active knuckleballer in the majors, and he has been limited this season by a suspension and injuries. A knuckleballer has yet to record a win this year.
The stigma
One of the few remaining knuckleballers has bounced around the minors, pitched in South Korea and earlier this season was sent to the Toronto Blue Jays’ Double-A affiliate after being designated for assignment.
Ryan Feierabend, 33, was a thirdround draft pick in 2003, when his fastball sizzled in the low 90s. He had fooled around with the knuckleball previously, but after years of scuffling he decided to deploy the pitch with more frequency. He felt he had little to lose.
Without the knuckleball, he says he would “be sitting at home trying to find a job.” But he also understands the stigma.
“Not only could it make for an interesting day behind the plate, but is a team willing to sacrifice all of the time [to develop a knuckleballer]?” Feierabend said. “As a knuckleballer, you get labeled as a junk-ball pitcher. Kids don’t want to be known as that, even if they get guys out.”
Feierabend gets at a number of the factors that endanger the knuckleball.
Catching the pitch isn’t easy. Teams often reason it isn’t worthwhile to carry an otherwise-inferior catcher just because he catches a knuckleball well. Velocity isn’t only in demand — it’s simply cooler.
There also are changes across the sport in swing paths: The knuckleball is designed to induce fly balls, a no-no for pitchers in today’s era of the launch angle, which itself came into vogue to counter the increase in power pitching.
All of this leads Wakefield to believe nobody will get drafted again by throwing the knuckleball.
Wakefield was a struggling position player who became a knuckleballer because a coach spotted him throwing one in the outfield just for fun. Soon he was in the instructional league as a full-fledged knuckleballer. Quickly, he learned his margin of error was small and the group that could mentor him was even smaller.
“I don’t know what to tell you” about the pitch, pitching coaches told him. He started jotting down self-help tips.
“I had to be my own pitching coach,” said Wakefield, who won 200 games in a 19-year major-league career that ended in 2011.
Dickey had been an All-American, an Olympian and a first-round draft choice by the Texas Rangers thanks to a mid-90s fastball combined with a quality changeup. But as his velocity declined, he became a spot starter and long reliever, a journeyman with a rising ERA.
In an April 2005 meeting, Rangers pitching coach Orel Hershiser proposed an idea. He knew Dickey threw a decent knuckleball once or twice per start, and Hershiser asked him if he would be interested in a demotion to the minor leagues to implement the pitch full time.
“We watched Tim [Wakefield] come in here and kick our butts with a 68-mph knuckleball,” Dickey recalled being told. “We want one of those guys.”
While Wakefield acknowledged the unlikelihood of a knuckleball renaissance, he said: “I don’t think it’ll ever disappear. It’s a very valuable weapon. The pitcher himself becomes very versatile for the club. You can start, relieve, pitch on short rest, multiple days in a row. Things like that create a dynamic for a ballclub.”