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Why Robert Suarez Needs to Throw His Changeup Less

By Ethan Penrod,Just Baseball

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Why Robert Suarez Needs to Throw His Changeup Less

The other adjustment comes with usage. Hitters can sit on the speed differential, making the pitch far less effective. For hitters, sitting on something slower becomes much easier when they know it’s coming 20–25% of the time instead of 8–10%.

How Should Suarez Attack Hitters?

Dialing back the usage doesn’t mean abandoning the pitch altogether. The changeup still plays a role, particularly against left-handed hitters who track his sinker well.

A first-pitch strike change-up to steal a strike or a two-strike chase pitch can work wonders, but those are instances of it being used sparingly. The less it is thrown, the more of a weapon it can be.

Suarez’s bread and butter remain in his fastballs. His four-seamer rides at the top of the zone, while his sinker dives down and in on righties or away from lefties. Together, they form one of the more punishing combinations in the game.

Over-relying on the changeup undercuts that strength. It gives hitters more time to adjust and, ultimately, more opportunities to put the ball in play. Suarez is at his best when he bullies hitters with velocity, forcing them to guess between two triple-digit fastballs rather than giving them a chance with something softer.

There is proof of this being the case. Last season, there were two instances where Suarez dominated with just fastballs. In April, he threw 75 consecutive fastballs, allowing two hits and no runs. Then he had another stretch of 66 straight fastballs in May, allowing one hit and no runs.