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Keep Your Eye on the Ball -
Curveballs,
Knuckleballs, and Fallacies of Baseball
Robert Watts and Terry Bahill
A Book Review by: Paul Harris, OD
This book was recommended to me by an attendee of the Sports Vision course
and I found it extremely insightful into not just the visual aspects of baseball
but anything that involves a ball of any sort. The book helped to dissolve
many of the misconceptions that have existed relative to curve balls or the
possibility of a "rising" fastball. The physics of curve balls and the
paths they travel and the science of how a rotating ball, from baseballs to golf
balls to soccer balls, was described in easy to understand concepts. The
flow of air around a baseball is much like the flow of air over and under a
wing. The rotation of the stitches creates differential points of where
the flow shifts from laminar flow to turbulent flow. The asymmetry in this
creates lateral forces that act to move the ball away from the simple hyperbolic
arcs that would exist secondary to gravity only. It is these asymmetric
forces that are the basis for these shifts and Watts and Bahill do a great job
explaining them.
Here are some facts about an 80-mile
an hour curve ball. It moves 2.1 feet laterally during its 60 feet 6 inch
path. Only .52 feet of that
occurs in the first half of the path to the plate.
•It moves 0.058 feet in the first
10 feet. •It moves 1.45 feet in the last 10
feet! They also explain a little
about knuckle balls. Knuckle balls with very low spin rates, for
example, 3 rpm, has typical lateral displacement of 2 feet.
The distance a knuckle ball moves
is independent of velocity. Thus,
it is better to throw a knuckle ball fast as it will still have all that
lateral movement occurring in a shorter period of time.
•In discussing some of the earlier
studies on eye movements to track baseball they cite work that suggested three increasingly more complex strategies for
tracking the baseball:
-
Track the ball with
only eye movements, and fall behind in the last 10 feet.
-
Track the ball with
head movements and smooth pursuit eye movements and fall behind
in the last 5 feet.
-
Track the ball over
the first part of its trajectory with smooth pursuit eye
movement, make a saccadic eye movement to a predicted point
ahead of the ball, continue to follow it with peripheral vision,
and finally, at the end of the ball’s flight, resume smooth
pursuit tracking with the ball’s image on the fovea.
Here are a few interesting quotes from the text.
-
Batters do not use vergence eye movements.
-
Head movement: “The professional made tracking head movements
between 10 and 20 degrees, which were probably small enough to go
unnoticed by their coach.
What the batter does not want to do is to allow rotations of the
body to drag the head along.”
-
Coaches should say, “Don’t let your body move your head, but it’s
okay to move your head to track the ball.”
As Pete Rose used to say, "See the ball, hit the ball." Well its
not quite that easy! "Now, if the batter is to hit the ball, he must predict where it
will be when it crosses the plate.
We say that he creates a mental model of the pitch.
The batter uses the mental model to predict the flight of the
pitch."
And what about the rising fastball? "The illusion of the rising
fastball is the result of the batter’s mistake in formulating his
mental model. It is most
likely that the batter’s perceived jump is the result of his
perspective and his underestimation of the speed of the pitch for
his mental model."Watts and Bahill conceptualize three different
phases involved in hitting a baseball.
-
•In the first third of the
ball’s flight the batter forms his mental model of the
ball’s trajectory.
-
•In the middle third, he observes
differences between the actual trajectory and his mental
model, updates his mental model, and finalizes his
swing.
-
•In the last third, he observes
errors in his mental model so that he can track the next
pitch better.
And what are the qualities of a superstar?
The success of the good players is due to faster
smooth pursuit eye movements, a good ability to
suppress the vestibulo-ocular reflex, and the
occasional use of an anticipatory saccade.
There is a great deal more in this book that is of value. I
highly recommend it for those of you that are sports enthusiasts or who will
work with athletes.
Available from
Amazon
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