NYPL notes: Hankins building confidence
After throwing four hitless innings in his debut for Mahoning Valley, Ethan Hankins was brimming with confidence.Playing around during his bullpen session prior to his second start, the Indians' No. 9 prospect stumbled across a more comfortable grip for his slider, and after another 4 2/3 hitless frames, that confidence
After throwing four hitless innings in his debut for Mahoning Valley,
Playing around during his bullpen session prior to his second start, the Indians' No. 9 prospect stumbled across a more comfortable grip for his slider, and after another 4 2/3 hitless frames, that confidence has kicked up to a whole new level.
"I was just playing around in the bullpen before the game, and I know that kind of sounds bad, but I was adjusting my fingers on the ball," explained the 19-year-old hurler. "I was talking with [teammate]
Hankins, who was named the New York-Penn League's Pitcher of the Week on Monday for his efforts, used his time at extended spring training to create different shapes for his slider and curve, incorporating his lower half more. His mind-set at that time was to use the slider more like his fastball, but that fateful bullpen tweak has him shifting his fingers on his four-seamer to make it more of a cutter-style grip, finding that with his arm slot he was able to get under it and give it a slider look.
He admits the velo wasn't quite where he wanted it to be with that pitch, but by throwing it in games with comfort, he knows that will come as he hones in on being able to make it sweeping or sharp to his needs.
"I had to be able to be comfortable in that situation where I just learned a new grip, but I was going to go out and trust myself, trust my body in that moment," said Hankins, the 35th overall pick in the 2018 Draft. "I feel like as I get more and more into games, I'll be able to throw that more and gain more feel with that grip and that pitch."
This development provides the 6-foot-6 righty with another workable piece of an already impressive arsenal, which includes a plus-fastball that touches the upper-90s.
In harnessing these aspects at such an early time in his development, Hankins continues to build not only his skills, but more importantly, his ability to use them all at his will.
"It's definitely confidence building for myself knowing I can adjust throughout the game. I have the confidence in myself now to be able to carry this into the game," explained the Georgia native. "Just understanding where my body needs to be, having control over my body, especially being 6-foot-6, to be able to be in tune with my body with every pitch, that's something I take pride in."
In brief
Nothing for free: Hudson Valley hurler
Put it in play:
Two-way ball: The Lowell Spinners pitching staff sits tied atop the ERA leaderboard, alongside Staten Island, with a 2.48 mark. However, they sit second-to-last in strikeouts with 78 total over 80 innings. The Spinners bats have also gotten off to a swift start, leading the league with a .266 team batting average through their first nine games despite striking out 97 times, second most in the league.
Craig Forde is a contributor to MiLB.com.