Pitchers are keeping us in it.
Both of these Pitchers are worth trading for.
Pitchers often lobbed the ball underhand;
Other Pitchers can do it too.
Both were great Pitchers and true aces.
Hitters know what the Pitchers are doing.
My dad called them Pitchers.
Those are called Pitchers who can rake.
We have three good Pitchers.
Two of baseball's biggest Pitchers.
Remember, it's not the fault of the Pitchers.
Pitchers don't stand like this.
But Pitchers sometimes hit you on purpose.
The Pitchers are going through a good experience right now.
We have almost ruined an entire generation of baseball Pitchers.
And look at the number of Pitchers who were lefthanders.
The Pitchers say that it is against the law and the constitution.
It's very important for Pitchers to control his mind in the bullpen.
Well, to pursue a higher calling than trying to make Pitchers look good.
Without having a word with me, you picked a fight with all the Pitchers.
George Herman“Babe” Ruth Jr. joined the Red Sox in 1914,
immediately becoming one of their better Pitchers.
Since there were no official rules about what constituted a‘fair pitch,' Pitchers started testing the boundaries.
Also towards this end, by 1864, the pitching box was instituted to limit the freedom of Pitchers.
The magazine Protégez-vous
has carried out a comparative test on 7 of these Pitchers(from different manufacturers) in 1999.
The Herald reported,“on account of the uncertain light,
the batting was weak and the Pitchers were poorly supported.”.
Carl Hubbell was one of the most renowned screwball Pitchers in the history of Major League Baseball.
The 3 x 12 foot box prevented Pitchers from taking a running start prior to releasing the ball.
Each one of them had thought there would be so many Pitchers of milk that his water would not be detected.
Selective batters caused Pitchers to throw 200-300 pitches per game, which
made for a really long, slow game(and presumably some sore arms).
For instance, to gain more speed on their pitches, Pitchers took a running start before pitching the ball underhand to the batter.