Nov 27, 2010: Argh. The footage I'd found has been pulled from YouTube. Not sure why, though MLB keeps a tight leash on such things.##### Found some Koufax footage. About halfway through this short clip he Ks Mantle, looking, and a bit later, in the dark footage toward the end, is a good strip of him throwing the devastating curve. Note there the emphatic downward motion of his shoulder -- which brought down his hand the faster, which (along with big, flexible hands and fingers) helped him make the ball spin 15 times on the way to the plate instead of the MLB-standard 12-13.
Following up my curveball coverageof last week, faithful reader and Cognitive Daily maestro Dave Munger wrote in noting that Arthur Shapiro, one of the authors of the curveball-explaining Illusion of the Year (and a friend of Munger's) posted a fuller explanation of the illusion and effect at his website, Illusion Sciences. As in the prior post, I'm not putting the illusion here because a) that way you'll have to see it there and b) I don't know how to move the illusion here anyway; I try, and my eyes hurt (a visual illusionist's DRM, I suspect). But I past in here an elided version of Shapiro's the fuller explanation. I love the dryness of the first couple sentences.
NB: Koufax-as-god bonuses for those who read (or skip) to the end of Shapiro's excerpt.
No wonder Mantle said what he said.__ __
OK. The bonuses. You get several. Best is last, I promise
1. Here's an NPR story that includes a podcast with highlights from Vin Scully calling the first of Koufax's no-hitters, on June 20, 1962. Emerged in a guy's basement in 1990.
2. A Koufax story I read a few years back, either in Leary's bio of him or perhaps an Angell piece. Koufax, retired almost 20 years and in his 40s, was pitching BP to the Dodgers (whom he often helped coach) between post-season series in the mid-1980s. This was the great-hitting Dodger line-up with Sax, Garvey, Baker, Cey, and others. Just throwing easy minor-league 45-year-old man fastballs for BP, letting the hitters groove their swings. One of the hitters calls for the famous curveball. This Koufax usually didn't throw, lest it aggravate his elbow. But this hitter wanted to see the thing, see if he could hit it, so Koufax indulged him.
This is a major league hitter who knows what pitch is coming, batting against a man in his mid-40s.
Curve comes in, drops like a stone -- a swing and a miss.
Hitter calls for another. Same result. Several more; the same.
By now the hitter's teammates are in hysterics. He gives up, walks off, tells his buddies, you try it, then. And one by one they do -- this great Dodger line-up comes up, every one knowing what pitch he's getting, and no one can connect. Koufax is 45 or so -- and with one pitch, pre-announced, he is unhittable.
No wonder Mantle said what he said.
As the story goes, manager Lasorda walked out to the mound and, using the pretext he wanted to protect Koufax's arm, asked him to stop -- but to Koufax he said, Cut it out already, I don't want my hitters mentally destroyed just before a post-season series because they can't hit a one-pitch man in his 40s.
3. Koufax under pressure. This is one of the most astounding bits of sportsdom I've ever read.
In his Historical Baseball Abstract, in his section on Don Drysdale, Bill James set out to evaluate the charge that Drysdale was an underperforming pitcher -- one who lost a lot of games he should have won. He finds for Drysdale, arguing that Drysdale simply appeared to underperform because he was pitching next to (or, worse, usually the day* after*) his teammate Koufax, who was an overperforming pitcher.
But can you really overperform when you have stuff like Sandy's? James looked at the numbers to find out. He focused on what percentage of the time each pitchers won games at different levels of run support and compared those percentages and performances to the statistical averages for such run support throughout Major League Baseball. Because MLB teams average about a bit over 4 runs scored a game, e.g., an average MLB pitcher who gets 4 runs of support will win just under half his games, and if his team scores 5 runs, he'll win over half his games.
So James takes both Drysdale's and James's games in 1963 and 1964, when both were at their peaks, and compares how they did in close games and games in which their team scored few runs. He finds that Don Drysdale generally won the games he should have, given the run support he actually got -- more than half of those in which he got 4 runs of support, e.g., and a respectable and better-than-MLB-average win-loss record.
But as James explains, Koufax -- this is frightening -- actually got harder to beat as he received less run support. When Koufax's team wasn't scoring, he simply choked the other team to death.
Like I said: Man was a god.