Template:Short description The slurve is a baseball pitch in which the pitcher throws a curve ball as if it were a slider.<ref name="popmech">"The Mechanics Of A Breaking Pitch", Popular Mechanics, April 1997. Accessed July 6, 2007.</ref> The pitch is gripped like a curve ball, but thrown with a slider velocity. The term is a portmanteau of slider and curve.

HistoryEdit

Johnny Sain of the Boston Braves was known to throw a slurve in the 1940s.<ref>Liptak, M."Johnny Sain Remembered" Template:Webarchive, White Sox Interactive. Accessed July 6, 2007.</ref> On May 6, 1998, Kerry Wood of the Chicago Cubs utilized the slurve in a major-league record-tying 20 strikeout game.<ref name="wood" /> Los Angeles Dodgers, Yakult Swallows, and Seibu Lions pitcher Kazuhisa Ishii, despite his well-documented control problems, used a slurve almost exclusively against left-handers. Alfredo Aceves from the Boston Red Sox was also known to throw a slurve. Stephen Strasburg claims to throw a slurve, although experts still call his pitch a curveball. Hall of Fame relief pitcher Goose Gossage stated that learning how to throw a slurve changed his career in his Yankeeography. Both Cy Young and Walter Johnson had slurves in their arsenals and the former is the earliest known user of the pitch, having started his career in 1890.

Notable slurve pitchersEdit

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Concerns in pitchingEdit

Critics of the slurve call the pitch a sloppy slider because of its wide break. They claim that the slurve produces more home runs than a late-breaking slider.<ref name="popmech" /> The usefulness of the slurve is debated. The slurve is also claimed to cause problems to a pitcher. In 1998, Kerry Wood claimed his elbow soreness was caused by throwing the slurve.<ref name="wood">Kiley, M."Whatever happened to ...",Chicago Sun-Times, February 8, 2000. Accessed July 6, 2007.</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

Template:Baseball pitches