Don't Call It A Curveball
Created By Japanese Scientists The 'Gyroball' Could Revolutionize American Baseball
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Play CBS Video Video A Brand New Pitch Rumors have been spreading in the baseball world about a new kind of pitch that some swear is almost unhittable. Anthony Mason takes a closer look at the "gyroball."
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Video The Mysterious 'Gyroball' Only On The Web: Baseball writer Will Carroll and minor league pitcher Steve Palazzolo demonstrate how to throw a "gyroball."
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The key to throwing a gyroball, says sportswriter Will Carroll, is a football-like spiral spin that's easy to learn but hard to master. (CBS)
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Minor league pitcher Steve Palazzolo is learning to throw what some claim is the first new pitch in a generation. It's called the "gyroball." True believers claim it's almost un-hittable.
"We know that a curveball curves and a slider slides and a screwball …does what a screwball does," said sportswriter Will Carroll.
What a Gyroball does, according to Carroll, is tip the balance of power from hitters to pitchers.
"It takes a hard left turn," says Carroll, referring to the gyroball.
A turn designed on a computer, not a diamond, by scientist Ryutaro Himeno in Tokyo. Now it's rumored to be the secret weapon of some Japanese pitchers. The key is a football-like spiral spin that's easy to learn but hard to master.
"Of course anyone can pitch a gyroball if they practice," says Himeno, a computer scientist at the University of Tokyo.
But on this side of the Pacific, it's been as elusive as extraterrestrials. That is until Carroll got his hands on a copy of the Japanese research.
"I'm not the only guy who saw the UFO," Carroll tells Mason. "I'm the guy who can call them."
While Palazzolo's fastball takes a straight path to home plate, his gyroball, if he gets the right spin, will dart to the right.
In baseball slang, it's one nasty pitch.
"Steve's is breaking a good foot and a half to two feet," says Carroll of Palazzolo's gyroball.
For an expert opinion, we took our video to Yankee Stadium and Al Leiter, a retired major league pitcher and Yes Network analyst.
"Alright, so he has a curveball grip and he pulls down on the ball," said Leiter after viewing Palazzolo's gyroball. "I threw one of these and I called it a cutter. They can call it want they want. It's a cut fastball."
That kind of skepticism hasn't stopped Will Carroll from believing in the gyroball gospel, even if there's chance something was lost in translation.
"Somewhere out there is a guy who will learn to pick it up and it's going to be his out pitch," says Carroll. "And what's that mean for a guy – 10, 15 million?"
If he's right, the Japanese import with the funny spin might just revolutionize America's past time.
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