The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Curveball adds to Strider’s powerful repertoire

Postseason starts led hard-throwing righty to seek improvemen­t.

- By Justin Toscano justin.toscano@ajc.com

NORTH PORT, FLA. — As he reflects now, Spencer Strider realizes that, coming off an oblique injury and heading into the postseason in 2022, he probably didn’t possess the necessary mindset to excel on that stage. In turn, he felt he let down the team.

Last October, he thought his two postseason starts were two of his best — if not his best — mental games of his career. But the Braves lost both. They were eliminated in the first round. Again.

“So, to me, you can say, ‘Well, other circumstan­ces led to the outcomes, it wasn’t me, I did everything I needed to do,’” Strider says. “Or you could say, ‘I did everything I needed to do and it wasn’t enough.’ So then the answer is, ‘I’ve got to get better.’”

And when Strider pondered how he could take the next step — and, by associatio­n, how the team could get back to the World Series — something hit him: He could develop a curveball.

To this point in his young but accomplish­ed career, Strider has relied on his four-seam fastball and his slider. He throws a changeup, but the curveball will fit him better and probably will be more effective.

The right-hander pairs his work ethic and intelligen­ce with his talent, and they form a jaw-dropping combinatio­n. New pitch? No problem. The story of Strider, 25, learning a curveball is actually a tale of how he relearned a curveball. He threw a curveball when he was coming off Tommy John surgery years ago. He tabled it when he entered profession­al baseball because he was focused on becoming a four-seam flamethrow­er. When the Braves bowed out of the playoffs early again, he said, “my ultimate leading goal of the offseason was like, ‘How can we get better? We didn’t win the World Series, how can I get better?’”

Origins of the curveball

In 2021, Strider and Sean

McLaughlin, another right-handed pitcher, met in the lunchroom while playing for Double-A Mississipp­i. Strider was 22 years old and McLaughlin was the minor leaguer who often mentored his younger teammates. Before the two even spoke much, McLaughlin gleaned this: Strider thought differentl­y than others.

During that year, Strider was fastball, fastball and more fastball. He needed another pitch and he sought out McLaughlin. Usually, McLaughlin said, guys want to know about a grip. But Strider wanted to know everything — and in great detail. He wanted to know, for example, how it should feel when it comes off his fingers.

“It was just very detail-oriented questions, immediatel­y,” McLaughlin told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on over the phone. “We didn’t even know each other’s hobbies or what we did off the field or (about our) families. We got right into the nitty-gritty of pitching, and that kind of led to a friendship, obviously, down the road. But it was just the detail-oriented questions in our first couple of conversati­ons about pitching and just, really, life, that you could tell he’s a little bit different in the way he goes about it — which is kind of, in my opinion, (what) makes him so elite and successful.”

Fast forward to this winter. When he wanted to reintroduc­e a curveball into his repertoire, Strider sought out McLaughlin, who now runs Maven Baseball Lab with his friend, Tyler Krieger. McLaughlin runs the pitching side and Krieger works with the hitters. Along with Strider, Max Fried, Matt Olson, A.J. Minter and others used the facility during the offseason.

At Maven, McLaughlin and Krieger — armed with tons of technology — help players in many ways. As former profession­al players, they understand how to relay informatio­n to bigleaguer­s. They take data from the best players in the game and use it to help their own clients by formulatin­g individual plans.

When he visited Maven before the 2023 season, Strider actually threw a few curveballs. At the time, his slider was backing up — it wasn’t moving properly — so they used the curveball as a way to help Strider gain a better feel for the slider. The curveballs were really good.

“Of course he can do it, because he’s Spencer Strider and he’s really good,” McLaughlin joked with people at the time.

After seeing those curveballs, McLaughlin knew Strider could possibly add the pitch in the future. But he didn’t know whether it would work with the righty’s arsenal.

So when the topic arose again this past offseason, McLaughlin sat down with Paul Davis, Atlanta’s director of pitching developmen­t, in January. They basically asked themselves: OK, he can throw this, but is it a good idea for his arsenal and how he pitches? With Davis’ help, the pair dove into the numbers, which said Strider would benefit from the addition.

In January and early February, Strider worked out at Truist Park, but would throw his two weekly bullpen sessions at Maven in front of McLaughlin and the helpful technology. There, he honed the curveball. The data told them the pitch looked how it should.

One person who saw that curveball before most: Olson, who hits at Maven.

“I think Strider could learn any pitch and go to throw it, and he’ll be just fine as long as he’s got that elite fastball,” Olson said.

Why the curveball fits Strider so well

No one — not even Strider — knows what this curveball could become or how it may evolve. “I think it could be anything,” Strider said, but there are reasons this curveball suits Strider so well. And Strider is the best when it comes to explaining something complex in a simple way.

At the beginning of the process, Strider asked himself: What do I have the opportunit­y to throw based on how my hand and body work? The curveball made the most sense because of his biomechani­cal strengths.

An example: Strider has a “very dominant middle finger,” which is why he can backspin the ball so well and can throw a hard slider. The curveball is a middle-finger-dominant pitch and it gives Strider velocity difference, so it fits a spot in his pitch profile that wasn’t previously occupied.

“If I could have 15 pitches, I would have 15 pitches, you know? That’d be great,” Strider said. “I could try to throw a sinker. It wouldn’t do anything. I could get (analytical people) to label it a sinker. It wouldn’t sink, if it ever did, and it would be a terrible pitch, so I wouldn’t try to throw one.”

It wouldn’t be a good sinker because Strider doesn’t throw the same way as great sinkerball­ers. When he throws, he gets behind the ball and his middle finger has a lot of flexibilit­y. He also wouldn’t throw a good splitter in his current form.

This brings us to the changeup, which Strider threw around 7% of the time last season. It has been, in a way, a confusing offering. It offers a velocity difference, but he hasn’t seemed to trust it a ton.

“The changeup is just something a little bit on the outside of what my capabiliti­es are biomechani­cally, so that’s why I’ve had to be weird about it and understand what its limits are, have reasonable expectatio­ns for it and what its movement profile is going to look like,” Strider said. “I’m always kind of still learning about how I can make it more consistent. I think that’s my thing with the changeup is I want it to be consistent.

“The curveball is a pitch that can be really good.”

He can throw triple digits with his four-seam fastball. His slider averages around 86 mph, and can go a few ticks up. Thus far, the curveball has been high-70s to low-80s.

“It’s different. It’s a slower pitch, right?” said Rick Kranitz, Atlanta’s pitching coach. “It will affect the timing of the hitter. There’s a lot of hitters (that), obviously when you throw so hard, they just sit hard. So now all of a sudden you start adding something else in to disrupt timing, that’s only a good thing.”

The metrics taken at Maven said the curveball is good. The Braves’ catchers, Sean Murphy and Travis d’Arnaud, have praised it. And now, the hitters’ swings are telling.

A year ago, Strider set the Braves franchise record for strikeouts in a single season, with 281. In two major-league seasons, he’s already become one of the best starting pitchers in baseball. But the postseason results told him he needed another pitch.

A word to opponents: Good luck.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/AJC FILE ?? Braves right-hander Spencer Strider (center) threw a curveball when he was coming off Tommy John surgery years ago but tabled it when he entered pro baseball because he was focused on becoming a four-seam flamethrow­er.
HYOSUB SHIN/AJC FILE Braves right-hander Spencer Strider (center) threw a curveball when he was coming off Tommy John surgery years ago but tabled it when he entered pro baseball because he was focused on becoming a four-seam flamethrow­er.
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Spencer Strider (left) confers with pitching coach Rick Kranitz at a Braves spring training workout in North Port, Fla. Kranitz on Strider’s curveball: “It will affect the timing of the hitter. There’s a lot of hitters (that), obviously when you throw so hard, they just sit hard.”
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Spencer Strider (left) confers with pitching coach Rick Kranitz at a Braves spring training workout in North Port, Fla. Kranitz on Strider’s curveball: “It will affect the timing of the hitter. There’s a lot of hitters (that), obviously when you throw so hard, they just sit hard.”

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