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Zink’s Story

Evan BrunellJul 13, 2008

When Charlie Zink returns home to El Dorado Hills, Calif. after the Pawtucket Red Sox season, life will become more difficult for two reasons: 1. When he goes golfing with his friends, heโ€™ll have to give strokes.
2. He wonโ€™t be pitching to International League batters.

Zink, who at one time seriously considered going to โ€œQโ€ school in hopes of joining the PGA Tour, was a scratch golfer but now plays to a 1.9 handicap.

โ€œWhen I go back home and golf with my friends, we play off our indexes so Iโ€™m giving away 10 strokes a round,โ€ said Zink. โ€œLuckily (my teammates) play me heads up so I like that better.โ€

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Indeed.

Without question thereโ€™s much to like about Zinkโ€™s pitching, which is to say heโ€™s enjoying a career year.

Through his first 19 starts, he was 10-2 with (which tied him for second in victories among International League pitchers) and a 2.28 ERA (which ranked second). And his total hits (85) plus walks allowed (35) nearly equaled his innings pitched (118 2/3, which ranked second).

But this isnโ€™t the same Charlie Zink who for the previous five seasons, was primarily a knuckleball pitcher.

Zink essentially has transformed himself from a conventional pitcher to an unconventional pitcher to one who now could be classified as a โ€œhybrid.โ€

โ€œI always threw a fastball and cutter along with my knuckleball,โ€ said Zink, who was recruited out of Sacramento City College by Luis Tiant -who at the time was coaching at the Savannah College of Art and Design in Georgia. โ€œBut in the first game of the season in Indianapolis, I gave up six runs in three innings (and lost, 8-0). I didnโ€™t have anything else to throw in that game.

โ€œMy knuckleball wasnโ€™t working. I wasnโ€™t locating anything well, including my fastball and cutter. All of a sudden they could sit on my fastball - at 80 miles per hour.โ€

The Indians almost stumbled over themselves en route to the batterโ€™s box.

Shortly thereafter, Pawtucketโ€™s new pitching coach, Rich Sauveur, had a little โ€œchatโ€ with Zink.

โ€œRich decided after that game that it would be a good idea to use a changeup to pitch off my fastball,โ€ said Zink. โ€œIf I could get ahead with my fastball and come right back with my changeup, it would be a good way to throw off hitters.

โ€œItโ€™s not that big of a difference but it would be enough to mess them up.โ€

Thatโ€™s exactly whatโ€™s happened, although Zink has far from abandoned his knuckleball.

โ€œHis knuckleball is so good that he can pitch in the major leagues,โ€ said Sauever, who threw a knuckleball that was good enough to earn time in the majors for parts of six seasons. โ€œI think there are teams that could use him in their starting rotation, but itโ€™s a matter of having trust in him as a starter.โ€

Granted, there isnโ€™t that much separation between Zinkโ€™s pitches.

His knuckleball flutters to the plate in the high 60s. His changeupโ€™s around 70-73. And his fastball is around 80-83.

โ€œThey see fastball coming out of my hand and its 10 miles per hour slower,โ€ said Zink. โ€œThe motion has been the hardest part to master in order to keep hitters from being able to tell whatโ€™s coming. Iโ€™ve tried to disguise it where Iโ€™m throwing everything with the same arm action.โ€

What Zink has been unable to disguise is the satisfaction he derives from fooling batters with all of his pitches.

โ€œObviously, this has been like a dream season where I have control and confidence in every pitch I throw at any time,โ€ he said. โ€œI have no problem if the catcher puts it down. I have confidence that heโ€™ going to be right and Iโ€™m going to be able to execute the pitch.

โ€œThis is probably the first time in my career that I havenโ€™t had a problem throwing any pitch they put down.โ€

Zink seemingly has a problem when he reads his strikeouts-to-walks ratio which is a tad better than 2-to-1 - a problem that he canโ€™t believe the stat sheet is accurate.

โ€œAs a (straight) knuckleball pitcher, Iโ€™ve never even been close to that ratio,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s usually been pretty close to 1-to-1. Now, the one thing I dread the most is walking someone. I donโ€™t want to give anyone a free pass. Iโ€™ll throw a fastball right down the middle and let them try to hit their way on. I canโ€™t give them a free pass anymore because too many guys have scored.

โ€œIโ€™m also not afraid to throw a knuckleball in a full count. But, if Iโ€™m not feeling it that day, Iโ€™ll throw a fastball. Nobodyโ€™s seen that many fastballs from me so itโ€™ll still jump on them and theyโ€™ll have a tough time hitting them solid.โ€

Which is exactly whatโ€™s happened. But Zink might not have been in Bostonโ€™s farm system and been able to expand his repertoire were it not for an โ€œawakeningโ€ following a disastrous 2004 season.

โ€œThe main thing for me was right after my really bad year in โ€˜04 (when he was a combined 1-10 between Portland and Sarasota) I came back in โ€˜05 and actually saw Tim Wakefield working out and he was a beast,โ€ recalled Zink. โ€œHe was going everything, including a lot of weights. I was like โ€˜Oh, wow! This guyโ€™s almost 40 years old and is in great shape, and this is probably what I need to do.โ€

The obvious question is why didnโ€™t Zink realize this in the first place? The answer, as much as anything, is attributable to inexperience.

โ€œOnce I converted to being a knuckleball pitcher all the players said โ€˜Youโ€™re a knuckleball pitcher so you donโ€™t need to work out,โ€™โ€ said Zink. โ€œI said โ€˜OK. I donโ€™t need to work out at all (because) Iโ€™m only throwing 65.

โ€œI just bought into it because I had so much success my first year (Zink was 7-9 with a 3.90 ERA for Sarasota and 3-2 with a 3.43 ERA for Portland) being a knuckleball pitcher without doing anything. I didnโ€™t work out at all. Thatโ€™s when I had my worst year ever (2004) because I didnโ€™t lift at all and gave my arm some rest.

โ€œIt really had a negative affect on me.โ€

Now, there are only positives about Zinkโ€™s performances.

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