LESS IS MORE

Luis Severino lived up to the hype in 2015 when he was brought up from Triple A in August.

He pitched to a 2.89 era and a 5-3 record as a 21 year old. His confidence and composure, which

was well beyond his years, was backed up by his electric stuff.

To say that Severino has unexpectedly struggled this year would be an understatement.

This season he is 0-6 with a 7.46 era (highest of any AL starter w/ qualifying innings)

His latest outing was a nightmare (on Friday the 13th of course) that ended

with Severino walking off the mound trailing 7-1 after only 2 2/3 innings,

and to add injury to insult, he was joined by team trainer Steve Donohue.

An MRI revealed a mild right triceps strain (and a bruised ego ), landing

him on the 15 day Disabled List.

The plan is … for Severino to rest, not pick up a baseball for 7 days, and

then make a minor league start.

The question is … what happened, and how do we fix the problem ??

Joe Girardi said after Friday night’s game – ” He’s throwing strikes,

but not locating his strikes where he needs to locate them. To me

that’s first and foremost what we have to get ironed out “.

I disagree Joe.

To me, the first and foremost thing to iron out is  Severino’s CHANGE UP .

 

IMO : Luis Severino needs to throw his Change Up with less velocity.

Here’s why :

When Severino was a minor league prospect, the scouting reports

graded his Fast Ball and his Change Up as plus pitches.

Both pitches were projected to be above MLB average, with his Slider

( his third best pitch) graded promising but below MLB average.

In 2014 Severino’s minor league Fast Ball velocity was between 93-95, while topping

out at 98 mph. This is very consistent with what we saw in 2015 when Luis

showed so much promise on the major league level with the Yankees.

Here’s the interesting and frustrating part of  his regression in 2016.

His velocity on the Fast Ball is still 93-95 with the ability to dial it up to 98 mph,

but his Change Up that he threw in the minors at 83-85 mph, he is now throwing

at an average speed of 89 mph. (when he throws it at all).

The variation in velocity between the Change & Fast Ball is not nearly enough.

More importantly when he threw the Change at a lower velocity it had sinking

action. This late movement made the pitch difficult to hit, and when contact was made,

batters would pound it into the ground. (At 89 mph the pitch comes in straight, with no movement)

During the YES broadcast, Paul O’Neill (who does a great job) mentioned how

important he thought it was to develop a Change to go along with the FB & Slider.

Actually that’s not correct. Severino doesn’t need to develop his Change, he needs to find the pitch

scouts once evaluated as a plus pitch, and somehow has lost it.

What I’m pointing out is actually good news. It is easier to find something you

once mastered, than to develop something you never possessed.

BTW – Severino’s mound opponent on Friday was Chris Sale 8-0 / 1.67 era

Chris’ slowest off-speed pitch that night was 79 mph (complete game 1R, 6H)

The Yankees coaching staff and management group need to realize …

Luis Severino must throw his Change Up with less velocity.

If they don’t … Luis will continue to struggle and try to over-throw his

fastball, which will lead to arm trouble.

If they do get him to find the feel again for his Change Up ,

(here comes the great news) Severino will be nearly un-hittable.

If I were Cashman / Girardi / Rothschild , I would make the message

very positive and direct.

We still have 1,000% confidence that you are the future Ace of the

staff, but we will not let you pitch again for the NY Yankees until

you find your old Change Up and throw it at 83-85 mph.

In this case … LESS IS MORE.