Grip the baseball with your index finger along one seam, and your middle finger along the other. Now, shift your index finger so that it's right alongside your middle finger. Cock your wrist back towards your body. When throwing the ball, the key is to keep your hand behind the ball for as long as possible. Snap down with the wrist (not the elbow) as late as possible in the delivery. The other important thing to remember is that you're not throwing it at the catcher's mitt. You should feel like you're pulling down on the ball, almost throwing it into the ground. The result should be a nice looping pitch that "drops off the table".

In baseball, a slow breaking pitch that curves slightly to the left when thrown by a right-hander, and drops dramatically. The curveball is thrown by snapping the elbow to generate transverse spin in the direction of the curve. Sandy Koufax may have had the greatest curveball ever.

In colloqual speech, "curveball" is used to describe a surprising event, usually one that affects pre-made plans. To "throw someone a curveball" is to tell them something unpleasant they were not expecting to hear.

Curveball Muscle

I was sitting in class the other day talking with a substitute teacher. He was an eccentric man, so it didn't surprise me, even coming from the short, stout, bald man with gray hair as it did, when he struck up an unusual conversation with the kid next to me, who happens to play baseball. He began with:

"Have you ever heard of a curveball muscle?"

"A curveball?"

"No, a curveball muscle. Have you ever heard of one?"

The teacher proceeded to unbutton his cuff and roll up the sleeve on his right arm. As he awkwardly bent his wrist back towards his bicep, he pointed out the bulge on his forearm.

"After forty years, it's still there. Ask your pitcher. I bet he has one."

It was altogether unnecessary for the teacher to point out the muscle, taking into account its relatively enormous size. The bulge hinted at a bicep muscle on his forearm. It was simply incredible.

As it turns out, throwing a curveball does indeed develop a certain muscle along the ulna. The flexor carpi ulnaris is the prime mover muscle in this specific pitch.

When I, and a few surrounding students were done staring at his arm, the teacher rolled his sleeve back down, buttoned his cuff, and continued to begin a lovely discussion on quality vampire movies...

Citation:

WebBall Bullpen. November 4, 2003. April 7, 2004. http://www.webball.com/bullpen/screwball_2.html

Log in or register to write something here or to contact authors.