“Knuckler More Dangerous than Spitball,”
Shelly
The Sporting News, May 1, 1957
One of the truly great spitball pitchers of all time—Fred [Frank]
Shellenback- -has a simple solution to end the No. 1 center of controversy
in the game today.
“Make the spitball legal,” says Shellenback, who gained fame
as a spitballer in the Pacific Coast League some years ago and now is
supervisor of minor league pitching personnel of the Giants.
In an interview with Jimmy Powers of the New York Daily News, Shelly
has listed reasons why this controversial pitch should be legalized:
- It would restore a balance to the game sadly lacking in this day
of seven-hour double-headers and boring processions of hurlers from
bull pen to the mound.
- It would add up to ten years to the career of the average hurler
who could master the art of throwing the pitch.
- It would cement a link to old-time averages; return the game to its
original characteristics.
Through the years, a lot of weird stories have sprung up about the spitter.
It has been charged it is a “dangerous” pitch that would fly
wild about the plate and injure hitters. It has been branded “unsanitary”
and a nightmare for fielding infielders.
“None of this is true,” Shellenback told Powers. “A
man doesn’t use a spitter unless he has the wrist action to use
it. If he can make the ball break, he has wonderful control. But the ball
definitely does not fly wild. The knuckler, which is legal today, is far
more dangerous. No one, the pitcher or the catcher, can tell you exactly
where the knuckler is going. So, forget about the spitter being a danger
to the hitter.”
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