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  2. Exit velocity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exit_velocity

    For most of baseball's history, there were no commonplace methods to quantify how hard-hit a batted ball was — the only aspect of the ball's speed being tracked was how fast the pitcher threw it, measured using various evolutions of radar guns. In 2015, MLB introduced Statcast technology to all 30 of its ballparks, in part to track exit velocity.

  3. Max Fried - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Fried

    His batting average and on-base percentage led all pitchers, while his slugging percentage ranked second. He scored 7 runs (2nd), hit three doubles (2nd), and drove in 5 RBIs (6th) in 55 at bats, had the second-highest exit velocity of all pitchers (90.3 mph), had 8 sacrifice hits (8th of all players), and was called upon to pinch hit four times.

  4. Akinori Otsuka - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akinori_Otsuka

    Otsuka threw a low-90's 4-seam fastball (tops out at about 94 mph) that is very straight, along with a hard, late-breaking slider. He employed an unorthodox pitching delivery wherein he lifted his lead leg up very slowly, tapped his glove, then fired to home plate, making his pitches look faster coming out of his hand and thus harder to pick up.

  5. Angels pitcher, Tennessee alum Ben Joyce throws fastest ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/angels-pitcher-tennessee-alum-ben...

    Joyce joins Aroldis Chapman, Jordan Hicks and Duran as the only pitchers to hit 104.5 in the pitching-tracking era, which began in 2008. Chapman's 105.8 mph in 2010 is still the hardest-thrown ball.

  6. The man who threw 115 MPH: Legendary flame-thrower made his ...

    www.aol.com/man-threw-115-mph-legendary...

    Nolan Ryan's fastball was clocked at 100.9 mph in 1974, a time in which radar readings were measured near the plate instead of out of the hand. Some calculate the same pitch would be clocked at ...

  7. Matt Manning dominates, Casey Mize still searching in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/matt-manning-dominates-casey-mize...

    His fastball averaged 95.4 mph against the Yankees, up from a 93.4 mph average last season. ... Manning surrendered a 405-foot solo home run to Juan Soto with one out in the first inning, but he ...

  8. Félix Hernández - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Félix_Hernández

    In 2016, Hernández's sinker averaged about 90–92 mph; four-seam fastball at 90–92 mph; slider at 84–86 mph; curveball at 79–81 mph; changeup at 87-88 mph; and the occasional cut fastball at 88–90 mph. [76] The changeup was his most commonly used two-strike pitch, [77] and had the highest whiff rate of his pitches.

  9. Steve Dalkowski - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Dalkowski

    Stephen Louis Dalkowski Jr. (June 3, 1939 [1] – April 19, 2020), nicknamed Dalko, [2] was an American left-handed pitcher.He was sometimes called the fastest pitcher in baseball history and had a fastball that probably exceeded 100 mph (160 km/h).