How the expected zone helps Janson Junk and Stefan Raeth in the breakout season

Former Seattle U teammate Tarik Skubal leads the qualified pitcher with a record of 3.8%.
While the junk stuff + score remains the same this year, his walking rate and base position + scores are getting bigger and bigger.
He didn’t expect these results, improvements or how to change his thinking about positioning.
After we started measuring progress, there has been a huge progress in improving speed in pitch design.
For speed, this is a radar gun. In pitch design, it is a combination of high-speed cameras and rotation tracking technology that becomes Rosetta stone.
The lack of command training is the ability to quantify location quality and improvement in practice environments.
Enter the expected zone tracker.
Using the tool, the pitcher or coach uses a touch screen to move the visible crosshairs of their intended targets, a digital catcher glove, on an interactive screen, in a denim environment on the home plate.
In addition to the pitch rotation, speed and expected running values, how close the pitch position is to the expected target.
“Anyway, it started with measuring it in a practice environment, just like we get reliable radar gun data, and the speed started to explode,” said Joel Condreyy of Driveline. “Now we can measure these things. Just like I need to increase or lose weight, a good way to start is to get on the scale.”
In the past winter, early drivetrain trainee garbage was one of the first garbage to buy training tools.
“He used the expected regional tools basically twice a week throughout the winter,” Condreyy said of the trash.
In the past, garbage had experienced trying to hone its commands by throwing nine pockets, and these devices threw pitchers into faxes on strike zones, divided into nine numbered targets.
However, there is no technology to record his actual performance, no pocket, and no targets that are oriented like predetermined area gloves.
Initially, he just started playing breezes with IZ Tracker, but then the trash threw forward all his taller bullpen.
He noticed that there were expected areas to be more focused. He intends to practice more. Yes, there is a number catcher’s glove that makes it more like a game. But he also knew his performance was being recorded. Feedback loops are as critical as pitch design. He did not guess progress or retreat, it was black and white.
He also noticed that he was getting better and better.



