What’s going on with SF Giants’ Camilo Doval? A deep examination

SAN FRANCISCO — The Giants, fresh off sweeping the Rockies, remain on the outskirts of the Wild Card race. They need as much going right as possible if they’re going to have any shot at making the postseason.

And Camilo Doval is not right.

His ERA has shot up from 2.93 last year to 4.39 this year. He’s walking nearly six batters per nine innings, one of the worst marks in all of baseball. He maintains his role as San Francisco’s closer, but he might be one or two more blown saves away from a demotion.

“That’s just not who he is,” said pitching coach Bryan Price. “There’s a much better pitcher in there, and we haven’t been able to extract that consistently.”

So, what’s wrong? A simple question. A complex answer, one that involves a multitude of factors.

Doval is at his best when he’s elevating his cutter and executing his slider down in the zone (away to righties, inside to lefties). He did so last season, earning his first All-Star selection in the process. This year, he’s still throwing his slider down in the zone, but his cutter is scattered.

Opponents have taken advantage of Doval’s inability to consistently locate his cutter and sinker. This season, hitters have a .269 batting average and .519 slugging percentage against Doval’s cutter. Last season, by contrast, opponents had a .175 batting average and .212 slugging percentage against the pitch. Doval’s sinker did not perform all that well last year (.303 batting average, .364 slugging percentage), but the results this season (.304 batting average, .435 slugging percentage) are even worse.

Doval’s difficulty locating his cutter and sinker appears to be reflected in how often he’s throwing those pitches. In 2023, Doval had a pretty uniform pitch mix, using the slider (36.2% usage), cutter (33.8%) and sinker (30%) almost equally. This July, by contrast, Doval has heavily relied on his slider (60.8%) while reducing his cutter (27.2%) and sinker (12%) usage.

“For a pitcher, we talk a lot about the value of the elevated fastball,” Price said. “He has a special one. That execution hasn’t been as elite as it’s been in the past and getting the ball to the bottom of the zone when he’s trying to go to the bottom. A lot of those pitches have ended up around the thigh area, and that’s where he’s vulnerable.”

There’s no singular definitive reason as to why Doval is not executing, but there is some stuff going on under the hood.

For one, Doval’s extension — how close a pitcher’s release point is to home plate — is a tad shorter. In 2023, he was extending 6.7 feet off the rubber. In 2024, he’s down to 6.4 feet.

“(The coaching staff) told me that I’m not stretching as long, that I’m taking that step very short,” Doval said through team interpreter Erwin Higueros. “But the problem with me is that I feel very comfortable with it, so then, they just left me alone.”

That shorter extension, in turn, could be altering his vertical release point, which is noticeably higher. In 2022, Doval had an average vertical release point of 5.31 feet off the ground. In 2023, it was 5.4 feet. In 2024, it is 5.49 feet.

Why is vertical release point important? Most pitchers, due to gravity, throw the ball at a downwards angle. Most hitters, by contrast, swing at an upwards angle. Sidearmers and submariners have an advantage because the angle of their deliveries align less with hitters’ swing paths. With Doval’s release point creeping higher, he loses some of that advantage.

Here are two clips (courtesy of Baseball Savant). The first is from July 14, 2022 when Doval releases a pitch at a vertical release angle of 5.00 feet, one of the lowest of his career.

The second is from June 28, 2024, when Doval releases a pitch at a vertical release angle of 5.80 feet, one of the highest of his career.

 

When asked about the shorter extension and higher vertical release point, Doval expressed that he believes he’s repeating the same motion all the time.

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