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Retropod

A debate that went into extra innings: Can baseballs curve?

Retropod

The Washington Post

History, Education For Kids, Kids & Family

4.5670 Ratings

🗓️ 28 November 2019

⏱️ 8 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Beginning in the earliest days of baseball, fans, journalists and even physicists disputed whether or not pitchers could make a ball curve.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, history lovers. I'm Mike Rosenwald with RetroPod, a show about the past, rediscovered.

0:07.1

Back in the mid-1990s, a grad student named Leroy Alawways began working on his dissertation at the University of California, Davis.

0:16.5

I was a mechanical engineer who did not really like reading.

0:21.6

But in doing the research, he found himself having a ball.

0:26.8

And I was loving it because I would find things that I'm just going,

0:30.3

this is amazing.

0:31.2

This story has to go into the dissertation.

0:33.6

The title of Alaway's project, it was a typically academic mouthful, aerodynamics of the curveball,

0:41.7

an investigation of the effects of angular velocity on baseball trajectories.

0:47.3

That's right, Aalways, in hopes of one day developing innovative batting practice machines,

0:53.8

was studying the physics of the

0:55.4

pitch that has frustrated hitters since baseball's earliest days in the 1800s.

1:02.5

But here's the thing. The reason Allaways was having so much fun, well, it's because he stumbled

1:09.4

upon story after story of fans, journalists, and even

1:14.2

physicists disputing whether a baseball could actually curve.

1:19.8

In baseball terms, it was the equivalent of arguing that the earth is flat.

1:25.7

It took nearly as long to sort out.

1:28.7

I don't think we'll ever have debates like we had on the curveball.

1:32.7

The Baseball Hall of Fame says the first player to throw a curveball

1:36.8

was a fellow in the 1860s named Candy Cummings.

1:41.6

Cummings played for the Excelsior Baseball club in Brooklyn, but he grew up in Massachusetts,

1:47.5

and it was there as a teenager that the curveball light bulb went off. He was walking down to

...

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