Riseball
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In fastpitch softball, a rise ball is type of pitch that is thrown on an upward trajectory and with backspin in order to impart a rising motion.[1] Two factors are primarily responsible for the effectiveness of the rise ball – movement and velocity. Pitchers rely on the movement of the rise ball to fool batters into swinging at pitches that appear to be in the strike zone but move up to and out of the upper part of the strike zone where they are more difficult to hit. Additionally the rise ball may be used in the lower strike zone to induce a batter to not swing at a pitch that they believe will drop out of the strike zone, but in fact travels through the zone causing the hitter to take a strike without swinging. Rise balls are high velocity pitches, generally thrown at speeds that match or are close to the pitcher’s fastball speed. At the women’s collegiate level, rise balls typically are thrown in a range of 60 to 70mph with the most dominant pitchers capable of speeds in excess of 70mph.
Although the rise ball has been popularized by Jennie Finch, who famously used it (among other pitches) to strike out some Major League Baseball players including Albert Pujols, Alex Rodriguez and Barry Bonds, most effective softball pitchers use the rise ball in combination with other pitches. Monica Abbott and Cat Osterman, are widely considered to be among the most dominant pitchers ever to use the rise ball as part of their pitching approach.[2][3]
There is some debate regarding the degree to which a rise ball actually “rises”.[4] It is a popular belief among players, coaches and observers that the rise ball exhibits an increasing upward trajectory during its flight – if viewed in 2 dimensions, from the side, the flight path of the ball is a convex curve with respect to the origin. Popular lore goes even further, suggesting that the flight of the ball exhibits one or more abrupt changes of direction or “hops” as the ball gets close to the plate.[5] Alternatively, some observers believe that the appearance of rise is a visual illusion created by the tendency of the rise ball to be thrown on an upward trajectory from a low release point and that the flight path of the ball is one of decreasing upward trajectory (i.e., the ball crosses the plate at a higher point that released, but its arc is concave with respect to the origin).[6]
The key element in the debate is whether the force created by the spin of the ball, known as the Magnus Effect, is great enough to offset the effect of the other net forces exerted on the ball such that the ball follows and increasingly upward trajectory for some part of its flight path.