by ssarge » Wed Sep 02, 2009 5:03 pm
I think Gone in 2.xx is right - the pitch closing speed makes the challenge of making solid contact easier in softball. While Dittoz is right and it is true that the speed falls off as the ball nears the plate, it seems to me that it is universal. In other words, the baseball does too, and since the baseball starts 50% faster (90 vs. 60), I'll bet it is still around 50% faster near the contact zone. A softball DOESN'T maintain aerodynamics as well - at least I don't think it does - but I'll bet the delta in deceleration between baseball and softball doesn't decrease much in the relative distances. But I'm guessing. I am certain it won't eliminate a 30mph gap.
Reaction time is very different. THAT is similar at the elite levels of both environments. The formula is pretty straight forward - I didn't even look at the linked site, but would bet it is accurate.
However, what virtually all comparisons do wrong (IMO, anyway) is assume the distance from the rubber to the plate to make the comparison (front of rubber to back of plate, actually). So, 40 or 43 feet in FP, 60' 6" in baseball. An accurate measurement would actually compare release points. Probably something like 55' in baseball, and maybe 36' in elite FP (assuming a 43' rubber).
Those numbers will change the math slightly. And it will vary by pitcher. But if you want a really accurate comparison, it should be taken into account.
As a pragmatic matter, however, the reaction time in either environment is generally in the 0.40 seconds to 0.45 seconds range.
Regards,
Scott
Last edited by
ssarge on Wed Sep 02, 2009 5:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.