Los Angeles Times

Ahead of the curve

Stripling’s new tack with the pitch yields big results

- By Andy McCullough

PITTSBURGH — One day last month, as Ross Stripling eased into the Dodgers’ starting rotation, he fell into conversati­on with pitching coach Rick Honeycutt about his curveball.

For Stripling, the curve could be unruly. The pitch escapes his hand at the relatively brisk speed of 81 mph before tumbling as many as 10 inches downward on a vertical plane. To tame it, Stripling felt he needed to slow his arm during his delivery. In a bullpen session, Honeycutt offered a suggestion, one which Stripling cited as a source for his recent strikeout-laden dominance.

“Why don’t you just throw it as hard as you can?” Honeycutt said. He referenced how Sandy Koufax threw his curveball. He mentioned modern examples, such as Clayton Kershaw and Rich Hill, who overwhelm hitters with the ferocity, not the accuracy, of their offspeed pitches. The great ones, Honeycutt explained, throw the curveball as hard as possible aimed toward the center of the plate.

“I was like, ‘All right, I’ll give it a go,’ ” Stripling said.

Stripling, a 28-year-old righthande­r, excels at absorbing informatio­n. He also understand­s how to capitalize on an opportunit­y. He holds a Series 7 license as a stockbroke­r and still trades for Wunderlich Securities. Most mornings he studies the markets while scanning for news on sources ranging from Yahoo Finance to President Trump’s Twitter feed.

He calls his boss in Houston to strategize for a couple of hours before heading to the ballpark. He manages the portfolios of his brother and his father but has been unable to convince his teammates

invest with him.

Even so, Stripling said, “I’ve had a good year.”

The same applies to his pitching. As injuries sidelined four members of the opening-day rotation, Stripling (3-1, 1.68 earned-run average) has excelled in the role he longed to fill last season.

In his last four outings heading into Tuesday’s start at Pittsburgh, Stripling has struck out 35 batters in 25 innings and given up only four earned runs. Along with rookie Walker Buehler, he is part of the reason the rotation ranked sixth in the majors in ERA before Monday’s games.

As a rookie in 2016, Stripling started for the Dodgers for two months before fading into the bullpen. Manager Dave Roberts credited three factors for Stripling’s recent relative renaissanc­e: an improved physique, an increased familiarit­y with bigleague hitters and a more nuanced sense of how his four-pitch arsenal plays at this level.

“Going into this season, he’s got a lot of clarity,” Roberts said. “He’s holding his stuff. And Ross is just a pro. In every sense of the word.”

Stripling started only two games in 2017. He was relegated to a role as a reliever used for multi-innings stints. The team did not trust him in high-leverage spots in the postseason. His appearance in Game 2 of the World Series, a four-pitch walk, started the chain of events that led to the Houston Astros tying the score and the series.

As 2018 began, Stripling entered the spring in the same role. He had received repeated assurances from Andrew Friedman, president of baseball operations, that the organizati­on believed in him as a starter. Yet, he was sixth on a depth chart where five men pitch. His friends in Texas pestered him about whether he would be a reliever for the rest of his career. He wondered how he might fare as a full-time starter on a lesstalent­ed team.

“I would be lying to you if I said I didn’t think about that,” Stripling said. “But I certainly don’t want to go on the record as saying like ‘I wish I got traded.’ Because that’s not where I was. What I wanted was another chance to start. I felt like that was definitely slipping away here.”

A cascade of ailments opened a door. He made an emergency start April 30 when Hill developed an infection in a finger. A couple of weeks later, Stripling received a temporary invitation to the rotation. When the Dodgers needed someone to pitch as Kershaw dealt with biceps tendinitis in early May, Stripling got the nod on one day’s notice.

Stripling threw four scoreless innings against the San Diego Padres on May 6. He struck out seven Cincinnati Reds in his next outing. He listened to Honeycutt’s advice about his curveball and accelerate­d his arm speed. The pitch became weaponized as hitters mistook it for his 93-mph fastball.

“Their eyes pick up on stuff, man,” Stripling said. “And they can see if it’s 5% less effort. And all of a sudden, now I’m torquing it at the same speed as my heater, and throwing the high heater off of that. I think it’s just messing with their eye level. It just has more intensity behind it.”

The curveball can finish at-bats. So can his slider. His changeup disarms left-handed hitters. The mix of offspeed choices allows him to avoid leaning on his fastball. Stripling uses fastballs 38.5% of the time, the 11thlowest percentage among the 132 pitchers who have thrown at least 40 innings this season.

“There’s not a lot of noncompeti­tive pitches,” catcher Austin Barnes said. “He’s throwing everything with a purpose, and I think it’s shown with his results.”

Stripling can be analytical about his approach and forthright about his vulnerabil­ity. On several occasions, he has admitted being unto sure about his ability to conquer big-league hitters. Inside the cloistered environmen­t of a clubhouse, his candor stands out.

After Stripling struck out nine Philadelph­ia Phillies on May 30, Justin Turner joked about how long Stripling’s postgame interview would last. He set the line at 15 minutes. (Stripling finished after 13.) Near the end, Stripling relayed Honeycutt’s advice about altering the usage of his breaking ball, while catcher Yasmani Grandal walked within earshot.

“You going to give Pittsburgh the whole scouting report, too?” Grandal huffed as he entered the shower. “Unbelievab­le.”

The outburst cracked up Barnes and Buehler, who were nearby. It amused Stripling.

“I was like, ‘Dude, I think people know I have a curveball,’ ” Stripling said.

Stripling remembers how his strength dwindled in the second half of 2016. He said he added about 20 pounds to his frame since then, bulking up to 220. At the end of a trip to Miami and Washington, Stripling noticed he had lost a couple of pounds. Brandon McDaniel, the strength and conditioni­ng coach, advised him to “gorge for a week,” Stripling said. He chomped on cookies in the dugout to maintain mass.

The adjustment­s are sure to continue. Stripling intends to be ready for them. He understand­s that as a member of the Dodgers pitching staff, a demotion to the bullpen is only a couple of mediocre outings away, even with injuries depleting the reserves.

“I still feel like I have to prove it,” Stripling said.

“I think you have to have the mentality that this is an opportunit­y that is not something I can take for granted.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? ROSS STRIPLING is turning in strong performanc­es as a starter for the Dodgers, striking out 35 batters and giving up only four earned runs over 25 innings in last four outings.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ROSS STRIPLING is turning in strong performanc­es as a starter for the Dodgers, striking out 35 batters and giving up only four earned runs over 25 innings in last four outings.
 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? COREY SEAGER walks past Enrique Hernandez to hand Ross Stripling, then a reliever, the ball after a game last season.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times COREY SEAGER walks past Enrique Hernandez to hand Ross Stripling, then a reliever, the ball after a game last season.

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