
Aneephus pitch (also spelledephus) inbaseball is a very high-arcingoff-speed pitch.[1] The delivery from thepitcher has very lowvelocity and often catches the hitter off-guard. The eephus pitch is thrown overhand like most pitches, but is characterized by an unusual, high-arcingtrajectory.[2][3] The corresponding slow velocity bears more resemblance to a slow-pitchsoftball delivery than to a traditional baseball pitch. It is considered a trick pitch because, in comparison to normal baseball pitches, which run from 70 to 100 miles per hour (110 to 160 km/h), an eephus pitch appears to move in slow motion at 55 mph (89 km/h) or less, sometimes as low as 35 mph (56 km/h).
Its invention is attributed toRip Sewell of thePittsburgh Pirates in the 1940s, although according to historiansJohn Thorn andJohn Holway, the first pitcher to throw a big blooper pitch wasBill Phillips, who played in theNational League on and off from 1890 through 1903. The practice then lay dormant for nearly 40 years until Sewell resurrected it.[4] According to managerFrankie Frisch, the pitch was named by outfielderMaurice Van Robays. When asked what it meant, Van Robays replied, "'Eephus ain't nothing, and that's a nothing pitch." Although the origin is not known for certain, "eephus" may come from theHebrew wordאפס (pronouncedEF-ess), meaning "zero".[5]
Sewell's earliest recorded use of the pitch came in a game against theBoston Braves atForbes Field inPittsburgh on June 1, 1943,[6][7] although as early as the spring training season of 1942 Sewell may have been experimenting with the pitch.[7] Sewell went on to win 20 games with the pitch in 1943.[8]
After appearing in over 300 major-league games, Rip Sewell gave up only one careerhome run off the eephus, toTed Williams in the1946 MLB All-Star Game. Williams challenged Sewell to throw the eephus. Sewell obliged, and Williams fouled off the pitch. However, Sewell then announced that he was going to throw the pitch again, and Williams clobbered it for a home run.[9][10] When describing the mechanics of the pitch and why he was able to succeed where others had failed, Williams remarked "A little girl could hit that pitch, but you had to provide all the power yourself."[11] Years later, however, Williams admitted that he had been running towards the pitcher's mound as he hit the ball, and photographs reveal that he was in fact a few feet in front of the batter's box when he made contact.[2][12] Since under Rule 6.06(a) of theOfficial Baseball Rules, a batter is out for illegal action when he hits a ball with one or both feet on the ground entirely outside the batter's box, Williams could have been ruled out had it been spotted by the home plate umpire.
Bill "Spaceman" Lee threw an eephus referred to as the "Leephus", "spaceball" or "moon ball".[13] Pitching for theBoston Red Sox against the Cincinnati Reds inGame 7 of the 1975 World Series, the Red Sox were up 3–0 when, on a 1–0 count, Lee threw an eephus pitch toTony Pérez with a runner on base.[14] The pitch resulted in a towering two-run home run over theGreen Monster that Lee often said afterward "is still rising".[15] The Red Sox went on to lose the game, 4–3, costing them the chance for their first World Series championship since 1918.[5]
Utility playerBrock Holt used a few eephus pitches during a relief appearance for theTexas Rangers on August 7, 2021, one registering the slowest MLB pitch for a called strike since at least 2008 (the pitch-tracking era) at 31.1 miles per hour (50.1 km/h).[16]
Other pitchers known to have employed the eephus pitch include:Fernando Abad (the "super changeup"),[17]Al McBean (the McBean ball),[18][19]Luis Tiant,Pedro Borbón,[20]Yu Darvish,[21][22]Casey Fossum (called the "Fossum Flip"),[23]Steve Hamilton (the folly floater),[24]Liván Hernández,Phil Niekro,[25]Orlando Hernández,Dave LaRoche (LaLob),Carlos Zambrano,Vicente Padilla (dubbed the "soap bubble" byVin Scully),[20][26]Satchel Paige,[27]Pascual Pérez (the Pascual Pitch),Kazuhito Tadano,[28]Bob Tewksbury,[29]Carlos Villanueva,[30]Alfredo Simón,[31]Clayton Kershaw,[32][a]Rich Hill,[33]Zack Greinke and unique wind-mill windup 1930s to 1950s pitcherBobo Newsom.
The eephus pitch has also been employed by various position players on the rare occasion that they take the mound. Examples includeChicago Cubs catcherTucker Barnhart, who threw a 39-mph eephus pitch for a strike during a one-inning appearance to close the game against theBoston Red Sox on July 16, 2023,[34] and threw only six pitches — all of them eephus pitches, ranging from 34 to 42 mph—for a single and three outs when he pitched the ninth inning of the Cubs' 8–0 loss to theAtlanta Braves on August 4, 2023.[35][36]
Other nicknames for the eephus pitch include the balloon ball, blooper ball, gondola, parachute, rainbow pitch—distinct from the rainbow curve[3]—gravity curve, The Monty Brewster (a reference to the titular character inBrewster's Millions), and the Bugs Bunny curve, a reference to the 1946Bugs Bunny cartoonBaseball Bugs in which several batters in a row swing and miss at a very slow pitch before the ball reaches the plate.
The eephus is sometimes used as part of strategy to confuse batters. On September 20, 2022, Philadelphia Phillies position playerGarrett Stubbs, on a rare pitching assignment, used a series of four eephus pitches to put Toronto Blue Jays catcherDanny Jansen behind in the count. The last Stubbs eephus registered 36.9 mph and his next pitch was an 83.8 mph fastball which earned a strikeout against the unprepared Jansen, who saw four consecutive pitches at slow speeds before the faster pitch that struck him out.[37]
The 2024 sports filmEephus, directed by Carson Lund, takes its name from the eephus pitch.[38]
perhaps his most memorable performance on July 28. In a 7-1 victory, McBean hit a grand slam, and in the ninth, he threw at least a half-dozen blooper pitches and earned his complete game when Orlando Cepeda bounced a blooper to shortstop José Pagán for the final out.