Forkball Forkball

Forkball - Definition and Overview


The forkball is a type of pitch in baseball. Related to the split-fingered fastball, the forkball is held between the first two fingers and thrown hard without snapping the wrist. The forkball differs from the split-fingered fastball, however, in that the ball is jammed deeper between the first two fingers.

When released, the forkball, a "poor man's knuckleball" has little spin, causing it to "tumble" down through the strike zone. It can be thrown as hard as 90 mi/h (145 km/h), so it can look like a fastball until it breaks near the plate.

This is as opposed to the splitter, which "drops off the table" without any of the knuckle-like tumbling action of the slower, less-spin forkball.

The forkball is favored by Japanese pitchers. Hideo Nomo of the Los Angeles Dodgers features a particularly nasty forkball in his repertoire.

See also

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