That debunks NOTHING. Besides the fact that the story is most likely inaccurate, there is a difference between a couple guys throwing that fast and the league standard to be throwing that fast. If you think the average fast ball has not increased in speed over the years, you're crazy. The availability of more pitching coaches has also changed the game to an extent
No proof of this. It does debunk your arguement, you haven't given me legit evidence that proves today's pitchers throw ' harder " than before. None whatsoever.
I guess we have different ways of arriving at " the truth ".
Explain to me how someone who weighs the same, using the same bat, hitting the ball on the same location, but faster will not hit the ball further than if they hit it at a slower speed. You are completely wrong and your physics is way off. More force, because of the increased speed (and most likely increased mass) will make the ball go further.
Again, I never said steroids don't make the ball go further - The added strength would turn warning track flyballs into HR's, and maybe some velocity on a pitchers fastball. But again, there's no legit evidence that steroids would increase batspeed, None at all. Again, batspeed has to do with how long you wait on the pitch, contact, not homerun power. Corked bats are ligher for a reason - They can increase batspeed. And they help you hit better, but do NOT help you hit homeruns further.
I didn't say you did, so don't jump to conclusion. What you did say was that steroids hard flexibility, which must not be to any significant degree judging by the fact that the athletes mentioned need MORE flexibility than baseball players and are well known for steroid and other drug use.
Sure you did, you've been attacking my this whole thread, claiming im wrong, without providing a shred of evidence to back up your claims.
And actually, I started this same thread on another forum, and recieved different responses disagreeing with your claims - There's no reason for me to take any of your opinions as gospel.
Actually, you took a couple outliers (where the evidence is very vague and probably not accurate) to try to give an example of all of major league baseball. If I say people over the last few hundred years have gotten taller and larger, but you give a couple examples of large people from back in the day, that does not change the fact that the average man has gotten larger. Extreme example, but hopefully you see the point.
if everything you state is true, prove it to me. link me some articles that provide legit evidence to back up your claims. Shoe me evidence that today's pitchers throw with more velocity than pitchers of yesteryear. I already provided two of many links on research dont by baseball historians that prove that myth to be false.