Brusdar Graterol is so much fun to watch pitch in the MLB

Brusdar Graterol is so much fun to watch pitch in the MLB

With the future of the game of baseball’s stars coming from foreign countries, many countries are famous for the players who are born there. The big counties are and are not limited to: Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Japan, and Venezuela. These countries are known to pound out Major League stars. One, in particular, I have had my eyes on for a few years now, is Brusdar Graterol, a relief pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers. Brusdar is a special kind of athlete, and it’s time people were introduced to him.

 

Started from the Bottom

Brusdar Javier Graterol was born on August 26th, 1998 in Calabozo, Venezuela. Brusdar had no father growing up, so he was raised by his mother and grandparents. Brusdar played baseball in Venezuela as a kid until 2014, when he signed with the Minnesota Twins. 

In 2016 Graterol underwent Tommy John surgery and missed the entire season. However, when he returned from the injury he pitched very well, going 4-1 with a 2.70 ERA while pitching in low A with the East Coast Twins. Minnesota saw the crazy potential in him and promoted him to high A to play with the Cedar Rapids Kernels. 

Now, what did they see in him exactly? A big, strong, 6’0 kid that can throw 100 MPH with ease. His mechanics allowed him to throw these high speeds very effortlessly. Throw in a wipeout slider in the mix, and you have a top prospect in the Twins organization. Take a look at it yourself, here is a video of Brusdar clocking in at 99 MPH while pitching for Cedar Rapids. 

Brusdar immediately became a Twin’s top prospect, and many were excited to see him at the major league level.

Finally, Brusdar got his long-awaited wish, making his MLB debut on September 1st, 2019 in a save appearance for the Twins against the Detroit Tigers, and he looked very sharp, touching 99 MPH and closing the game out on a double play.

Brusdar continued pitching for the Twins in the bullpen for the rest of the year and finished the season to the tune of a 4.66 ERA. During the offseason after the Twins were swept by the Yankees in the ALDS, Brusdar worked his butt off. Brusdar was frustrated with the stats he finished with and wanted to do something about it. He and everyone else around him had realized the crazy potential he had, and he pursued to find it

In February of 2020, Brusdar was traded to the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers had fantasized about having a player of this caliber and potential in their bullpen, it was their one weakness they needed to address. The Dodgers saw the crazy potential, and fine-tuned Brusdar as their little toy to add to the bullpen. 

 

The beginning of a legacy

2020 was the season Brusdar made a name for himself. Although the stats may not completely jump off the page, that’s not what brings him attention. What attracted all the fans towards him was the crazy things he did while pitching.

Brusdar raised his fastball 2 MPH during that offseason, and it was on display throughout the entire season. Brusdar dominated Baseball Savant’s leaderboard in 2020 for velocity, as he is in second place behind Aroldis Chapman in velocity for a sinker, and in fourth place for a four-seam fastball. 

Not only is his fastball extremely tough to hit, but they have a crazy run on them. Run is when a fastball moves from side to side. A fastball could start at the middle of the plate, but when it hits the catcher’s glove may be on the inside half of the plate to a right-handed batter, which means that the pitch ran inside. This video by Pitching Ninja shows exactly what I am talking about, watch where the pitcher releases the ball, and where it ends up on the plate. Brusdar makes a few appearances in this video if you notice. Here is another example of what Brusdar looks like with his fastballs, watch the absurd amount of depth his pitches have on them.

But no pitcher is successful without a secondary pitch, a pitch to change speeds and eye level with. Even though you may throw 102 MPH, you still need a secondary pitch to slow down the hitter and throw off their timing. For that, Brusdar throws a wicked slider off of his fastballs, as well as a changeup to add even more variety. Watch this video and watch how the fastball (up) and the slider (down) go in different directions of each other. As a hitter seeing 102, it’s extremely tough for them to recognize the pitch. To go from 102 to 88 is very tough to adjust to as a hitter.

But yet the most impressive part of it all is he does it without even trying. Just watching Jomboy Media’s video on his outing against the Astros shows how easily he releases the ball, almost as if he doesn’t try. It’s amazing to watch.

Brusdar is also an amazing personality. Every time he strikes someone out he gets fired up.Watch Graterol’s reaction after the ball is caught. He is so passionate and is such a show to watch every time he goes out to pitch.

Just speaking on how special of an athlete Graterol is quite frankly is not enough. You just have to watch and understand to realize how gifted this young kid is. Although he struggled due to injury in 2021, I predict he will have a phenomenal season once more in 2022 and will become the Dodgers regular closer for the season. Brusdar has blown up social media because of how talented and ridiculous he is. Look up Brusdar Graterol on Youtube and you will scroll for days finding videos on all of his pitching and how he is so good. This young man will light up the league, and we have yet to see all of his potential come to light.

The LA Dodgers are Fighting with the Giants for first in the NL West

The LA Dodgers are Fighting with the Giants for first in the NL West

The LA Dodgers are Fighting with the Giants for first in the NL West

 

The LA Dodgers have been fighting with the San Francisco Giants for most of the season for first in their division, the NL West. It’s been a tight race, sometimes the Giants were ahead, and sometimes the Dodgers were ahead. Right now the Giants are one game ahead of the Dodgers, but that could easily change because all it takes is the Dodgers winning a game and the Giants losing a game and then they’re tied. The Dodgers are at 97-54, and the Giants are at 98-53, they’re only a game apart from each other.

 

The standings for the division the LA Dodgers and San Francisco Giants are a part of.

No one expected the Giants to be this good this year, most people thought that the Padres would be the second best team in the NL West and the Dodgers to be the first, so the Giants have surprised everyone. They don’t have any big-name players besides their catcher Buster Posey and their third baseman that they recently picked up, Kris Bryant who they acquired from the Chicago Cubs who cleared out most of their roster to get new players next year. They have had a lot of players step up this year and have done a lot for the Giants’ team.  Injuries have held the dodgers back some this season as well as former Cy Young award winner Trevor Bauer who was probably seen for the last time in the MLB in June or July because of Sexual Assault charges he’s facing. That doesn’t change the fact that San Francisco has surprised everyone this season. Current injuries include three outfielders, former MVP Cody Bellinger, Billy Mckinney, and AJ Pollock. There are also 10 injured pitchers, Danny Duffy, Garrett Cleavinger, Cole Hamels, Jimmy Nelson, Jimmy Sherfy, Scott Alexander, Caleb Ferguson, Tommy Kahnle, Edwin Rios, and one of their starting pitchers, Dustin May. The Dodgers also picked up two key pieces of their team late this season, Max Scherzer, arguably the best pitcher in the league right now with an ERA of 2.08 and .78 with the Dodgers.

 

Both teams have been really good in the past, last year the Dodgers went to the world series against the Tampa Bay Rays and won their first world series since 1988, 32 years and they made it to the world series in 2017 and 2018 as well. The San Francisco Giants won the World Series 3 times in 6 years, in 2014, 2012, and 2010, but after that their team kind of fell apart. Both the Dodgers and the Giants have clinched playoff spots with the two best records in the league. 

 

The problem some people have with two really good teams in the same division is that they could be the two best teams in the league just like this year, but one of them has to play in the wild card game where anything could happen. It’s only one game and if the better team loses they are out of the playoffs. The winner of the NL Wild Card game which will likely be either the Dodgers or the Giants will play the other team in one of the NLDS series. With around 10 games left in the season, the playoffs are closer than ever, which team will come out on top, the Dodgers or the Giants? Only time can tell for us, in around two weeks we will know who is going to be the Wild Card team and who will play the winner of that Wild Card game in a best of 5 series.

 

Links: 

 

Pedro Martinez pitched the greatest season of all time

Pedro Martinez was a starting pitcher for the Boston Red Sox in the ’90s. He pitched the greatest season ever, then went on to have quite literally, a hall of fame career. Why was it the greatest pitching season ever? Let me explain.

A Star is Born

Pedro Martinez was originally signed as an amateur free agent by the Los Angeles Dodgers. He slowly worked up in the Dodgers farm system and made his debut on September 24th, 1992. He was soon traded to the Montreal Expos on November 19th, 1993. Pedro then had his first successful season in 1995, posting a 3.45 ERA and a 1.15 WHIP. He then repeated that season next year, as well as making his first all-star appearance. He then started getting better and better. His best season with the Expos came in 1997 when he posted a whopping 1.90 ERA. With that, he won his first Cy Young award. He then was traded to the Boston Red Sox in 1998, coming second in Cy Young Award behind Roger Clemens. The year following, he would then pitch what I call, “The greatest pitching season ever.”

El Grande

During his time in Boston, Martinez perfected his repertoire. He had a four-seam fastball that had movement that went in the upper 90s, a ridiculous curveball, and a circle changeup, that in my non-official opinion, is the greatest changeup ever. He also mixed in a 2 seam fastball and a cutter from time to time.

The first month of the season was spectacular for Pedro, going 4-1 with a 2.21 ERA. Then he went to the all-star game, and that was when he shined. He started the all-star game in Fenway park. He faced the leadoff man for the National League, Barry Larkin. Larkin was a very disciplined hitter throughout his career. His highest season for strikeouts was only 69. Pedro fed him fastball after fastball after fastball, and then he threw his changeup, and he was gone. 96mph, 97mph, 98mph, and it’s the 85mph changeup that gets him to miss.

Then comes Larry Walker, who is only hitting .382 in about 80 games, which is no big deal at all. And again, Martinez finishes him off with a fastball.

Last up in the inning, is Sammy Sosa, who was leading the National League in home runs. And he strikes out Sosa, which strikes out the side. Martinez just struck out 3 Hall of Famers with ease. But he isn’t done yet.

Next inning, he strikes out Mark McGwire. Pedro feeds the next batter, Matt Williams, a curveball which he chops to second base, but an error by future Hall of Famer Roberto Alomar errors, and now there is a runner on first.

Martinez strikes out Jeff Bagwell, and Matt Williams attempts to steal but is caught stealing by that year’s MVP Ivan  Rodriguez. And just like that, Pedro’s all-star appearance is over.

But that doesn’t stop Martinez. He would then finish the 1999 season going 23-4 with a 2.07 ERA and a .923 WHIP. He had one bad start against the Florida Marlins, where he surrendered 8 runs. The most memorable start, however, came against the Yankees, his final stat line being, 9 innings pitched, one hit allowed, 17 strikeouts. Up against a dominating team, with a complete lineup, he completely shut them down in a hitter-friendly ballpark. But Pedro’s dominance would extend past the regular season, into the postseason, where he continued being Pedro.

Senor October

The regular season ended, and because of Martinez’s brilliant pitching, the Red Sox made the playoffs, where he still shined. The last two postseasons for Pedro weren’t bad, but not as good as they could be, where he posted a 4.15 ERA in 1997, and a 3.41 ERA in 1998. What about 1999? Pedro had 0.88 ERA! In the playoffs!

The most important appearance in the playoffs was actually not as a starter. It was in relief. Game 5 of the 1999 ALDS, against the Cleveland Indians. Fun fact about the 1999 Cleveland Indians: they scored over 1000 runs that season. Anyways, the game was tied 8-8 in the bottom of the 4th, when Pedro Martinez entered the game, facing the herculean task of pitching to the heart of Cleveland’s order.

First came Sandy Alomar, who grounded out. Kenny Lofton was next, and he did the same thing. Two down in the inning and Omar Vizquel came up to the dish, and he lined out to first base. Next inning, it would be even harder.

Leading off in the 5th was Roberto Alomar, who grounded out to shortstop. That’s revenge for the error he had in the all-star game that year. Next up was Manny Ramirez, who actually became Pedro’s teammate in a few years. He drew a walk, putting a runner on base for the most dangerous man in the American League, Jim Thome, who has already hit 4 home runs in the 5 game series. And he struck out, in the most awkward way possible, a blown foul tip call that sent him back to the dugout unsuccessful. And yet another Hall of Famer came up to face Pedro, this one being Harold Baines. And Pedro struck him out too!

Pedro would continue to mow batters down and get the save, no hitting the best offense in the American League. The Red Sox would then be defeated by the New York Yankees, who went on to win the World Series. However, on the bright side Pedro would win his second Cy Young in 3 years, and came 2nd in MVP voting, falling to Ivan Rodriguez in a very close race. And after the season ended, and he got his awards, the greatest season ever pitched, was over. 

 

Skip to toolbar