Landon Knack (6-25-24) - podcast episode cover

Landon Knack (6-25-24)

Jun 26, 20247 min
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Episode description

Landon talks about the Dodgers minor league culture, training at USC during the covid season, and looking forward to his first start against the Giants.

Transcript

The Dodgers and White Sox getting said for game two of this three game series, and yesterday Dave Roberts said Landon Neck is not going anywhere. He will start Friday in San Francisco, and Young Neck is with us right now. Thanks a lot for the time. Yeah, thanks for having me. I feel like I got you away from bad influencer Austin Barnes. But a great teammate, I would imagine. Oh yeah, absolutely, a great teammate. Just likes the mess with some guys, kind of like get them off their

game and just kind of like get some genuine reactions out of them. But yeah, no, he's a character man. I was telling Mark Priri yesterday how much I enjoyed being around yourself, Gavin Stone and Bobby Miller and all three of you seem to be very coachable. Yeah, we try to be. Yeah. No, we all kind of came up together and kind of fed off of a little bit of the culture that they've built down in the minor league system here and really just kind of push it. Everybody kind of

pushes each other to kind of get the best version out of themselves. And yeah, I mean it's been a great group and it feels like, like you said, the culture down there is to be yourself. The way you pitch is not the same way Bobby Miller pitches. Yeah. No, obviously very different guys as far as what we do on the mound, but yeah, no, everybody, Our entire minor league system is a lot of kind

of being yourself. They're gonna give you all of the tools to get to that best version of yourself, but also just staying true to yourself because everybody's different. They know not everything works for everybody. There's no cookie cutter way to do things, and so they really are doing a really good job of making sure that everybody has the tools to get to where they need to be. But being themselves in this day and age of everybody looking at velocity,

how did you separate yourself to be recognized to be a pitcher? I think I was always a guy who could just pitch. That was always kind of my calling card for a long time, and then I never even learned velocity until kind of later on. I was always a pitcher first, and so I kind of learned how to throw with lesser velo early on in college and then kind of kept on with that and really just learning how to switch speeds, really play the front to back game and just keep people off balance.

And you also have four pitches. The way I understand it, is there a temptation to try to use all four or how do you mix and match when you have that many pitches in your back pocket. A lot of it just kind of goes with the what the game's calling for, what the batter calls for, just kind of like with the matchups, I usually try to at least mix in a little bit of the four just because the more pitches that they have in the back of their mind, the less they can actually

eliminate, and it just makes it just a little bit tougher. Even even if it's something that they handle it well, if you just kind of give them one look at it, it still has that in the back of their mind. So we try to kind of mix things up as well as we can just to kind of keep them off Landon Nak is our guest in front of first pitch between the Dodgers and White Sox. I mentioned Bobby Miller.

He's on the mound tonight. What have you seen from Bobby being teammates with him since the minor leagues and just his growth to where he's at right now. Yeah, No, he has continued to tune things this like the longer we've gone. Obviously got to see Bobby from the alt side all the way through, played with him in Great Lakes and in Tulsa, and then kind

of getting to see him again here now has been pretty cool. The guy has obviously, he's worked his butt off, He's continued to develop his off speed pitches a lot, and he's really a much more complete pitcher than minor league Bobby. You just mentioned the alternate site that was at USC during the twenty twenty COVID season. It feels like the players that were there formed a

lifelong bond. Absolutely. Yeah, I mean it was something that not many people kind of got to go through, and so the guys that did where we were kind of all kind of just away from everything. It was just hotel, field and back, and so it was just kind of those were your only group of people you really got to be around during that time. And so yeah, of course you kind of create a bond with those guys and have that shared experiperience that you'll be able to remember for the rest of

your life. Do you feel like it helped your development or do you feel like you were a year behind because of that. I think it helped a lot. Just being able to be around some of the older guys. I think it kind of got us a little bit more comfortable in kind of being able to like talk with them and understand like professional hitters. Like obviously getting to jump straight into facing really Triple A and big league hitters for your kind

of your first taste of professional baseball. It was a huge help just kind of getting that step ahead of like what you're working towards, Like they immediately show you where you're missing things and what you need to work on. It feels like maybe the game slowed down a little bit where you know, during a minor league season you're competing obviously against other teams and you're trying to impress. Feels like that was somewhat of a controlled environment with competition, but also

giving yourself the grace to grow. Absolutely, yeah, it's all obviously it's a different situation than most people get to go into, but of course, yeah, the just kind of the being able to control the environment of like how many innings you get, like kind of making it more of it's not quite an inn squad, but it's like more just like an intersquad type fields where they can control the game and really like let you work on different stuff

while still getting to compete against guys. Yeah, no, it was absolutely, it was a It was a great experience. Landonnack is our guest, and he will be introduced as a new character in the Dodger Giants rivalry. He pitches Friday night in San Francisco. How much are you looking forward to, obviously making another start, but getting your first taste of pitching in San

Francisco. Yeah, very excited. Yeah, I've always kind of growing up, you always kind of hear about the Dodgers and Giants rivalry that they've always had and kind of just how far that goes back, and so yeah, getting to kind of get out there and pitch in enemy territory in San Francisco and kind of getting to experience the energy from those fans as they get fired up to play us. Yeah, no, I can't wait. That's gonna be an awesome experience. And you're unflappable like Gavin Stone as well, So

I don't feel like that is any sort of intimidation. Especially Nac a lot of Dodger fans show up in San Francisco. Now, yeah, absolutely, Dodger fans travel really well, of course, and going to play a team that your rivals with, of course they're gonna want to be up there to experience it as well. And so yeah, no, absolutely, it's it's something we all want to embrace. All right. Thanks a lot for the time. Great to have you around again, and I feel like this is

only the beginning for landon NAC. Thank you, appreciate you having me

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