I called former A's pitcher and current ESPN baseball analyst Dallas Braden for a Q&A that will run Sunday. Two things stood out:
1) He answered the phone pretending to be a pizza delivery establishment. That's a pretty bold gag in an era of caller ID, and I complimented him on it.
2) I told him I only needed about 10 minutes of his time, but it turned into more like 20 because my last question — which didn't end up making the cut for the print Q&A — was about throwing changeups and he ended up giving a 10-minute answer.
Because the Twins are known to be favoring more changeups this season — particularly now that soft-tossing lefty Tommy Milone figures to stick even longer in the rotation thanks to Ervin Santana's suspension — his answer seems like #relevant #content, but there was no way it was going to fit into a condensed space.
Braden's average fastball was around 88 mph in his career, while his changeup was around 73 mph. He was a classic lefty who relied on control and changing speeds. He threw changeups for 24 percent of his career pitches, far above the major league average. As such, here are his thoughts on the changeup:
Q What is the key to a good changeup, and how do you get a guy to get comfortable throwing it?
A The key to a good changeup is understanding what the pitch is trying to do and what it's meant to do . It's meant to emulate the pitch that you see (most) of the at bat, which is a fastball. So this pitch is meant to look like something it is not. So now you need to pay attention to what sort of fastball you predominantly throw. Myself, I was predominantly a four-seam fastball pitcher until I started my ascent into the big leagues, and then I realized I needed to start sinking and running the ball to get guys to hit the ball off the end of the bat. So I developed a two-seam changeup as well.
I threw multiple different changeups for the reason that I would throw a four-seam fastball inside, and to get the batter off that fastball, I'm now going to throw him something that looks like what he just saw — a four-seam changeup. Then if a guy is fouling my two-seam fastball off and I know that he's on me and I need to get him off that pitch, I'm not going to go back to the four-seam changeup. I'm going to throw the two-seam changeup that looks just like the two-seam fastball I've been throwing this guy.