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Skenes using this nasty trick to freeze hitters

Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Paul Skenes (30) pitches against the St. Louis Cardinals
Pittsburgh Pirates starting pitcher Paul Skenes (30) pitches against the St. Louis Cardinals
© Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports

It's been 11 starts in the MLB and Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes already had All-Star starter on his resume.

It's no surprise, Skenes' four-seam fastball easily tops over 100 mph when he wants it to. He also has a slider and curveball that helps keep batter guessing and there is the "splinker", the famous splitter-sinker combo.


With all those tools, Skenes has began his MLB career at 6-0 with a 1.90 ERA at the young age of 22.

There is also talk that Skenes could be a favorite for the Cy Young Award.

And, after a conversation he had with the "Pitching Ninja" Rob Friedman during the All-Star Game activities, it looks like there is a good chance it could happen.

Even when Skenes misses a pitch, he's using it to his advantage.

While talking with Friedman on Monday, Skenes says he sometimes uses his misses.

After throwing a ball, Skenes has the ability to follow up with another pitch that appears to be going to the same exact location, but actually ends up over the plate for a strike. Watch the video here.

Skenes gives credit to Friedman for showing him about "tunneling" which is when a pitcher can make a follow-up pitch look like it's going to follow the pervious pitch outside the plate, but it lands for a strike.

The technique makes it almost impossible for the batter not to lay off the pitch.