Twins' Jhoan Duran thinks he can throw 105 mph this season

Nobody in the majors hit 105 mph on the radar gun last season.
Twins' Jhoan Duran thinks he can throw 105 mph this season
Twins' Jhoan Duran thinks he can throw 105 mph this season /

Jhoan Duran might throw even harder in 2023. 

The electrifying Minnesota Twins reliever led the majors in 2022 with an average four-seam fastball velocity of 100.8 mph. At TwinsFest in Minneapolis on Saturday, Duran said he thinks he can heat his fastball up to 105 mph this season. 

Last season, Duran's hardest pitch was a 103.3 mph fastball that he threw to Cleveland's Franmil Reyes on May 14. 

According to Baseball Savant, there were 23 pitches of at least 103 mph in the big leagues last season. Duran had 10 of them. Ryan Helsley of the Cardinals threw nine and the other four belonged to Andres Munoz (2), Felix Bautista and Jordan Hicks. 

Helsley was the only pitcher to have his fastball clocked at 104 mph. He did it twice.

Nobody hit 105 mph. 

Duran's average splitter velocity also led the majors at 96.4 mph. The next closest was 92.5 mph and only four pitchers threw a splitter averaging 90-plus mph. What's crazy is that Duran was the only pitcher in the majors to hit 98 mph with a splitter in 2022 and he did it 29 times. 

He threw six splitters at 99 mph and one of those hit 100 mph. 

Related: Could the Twins be sitting on a lights-out bullpen in 2023?


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Joe Nelson
JOE NELSON

Title: Bring Me The Sports co-owner, editor Email: joe@bringmethenews.com Twitter: @JoeBMTN Education: Southwest Minnesota State University Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota Expertise: All things Minnesota sports Nelson has covered Minnesota sports for two decades, starting his media career in sports radio. He worked at small market Minnesota stations in Marshall and St. Cloud before joining one of the nation's highest-rated sports stations, KFAN-FM 100.3 in the Twin Cities. There, he was the producer of the top-rated mid-morning sports show with Minnesota Vikings announcer Paul Allen.  His radio experience helped blossom a career as a sports writer, joining Minneapolis-based Bring Me The News in 2011.  Nelson and Adam Uren became co-owners of Bring Me The News in 2018 and have since more than tripled the site's traffic and launched Bring Me The Sports in cooperation with the Sports Illustrated/FanNation umbrella. Nelson has covered the Super Bowl and numerous training camps, NFL combines, the MLB All-Star Game and Minnesota playoff games, in addition to the day-to-day happenings on and off the field of play.  Nelson also has extensive knowledge of non-sports subjects, including news and weather. He works closely with Bring Me The News meteorologist Sven Sundgaard to produce a bevy of weather and climate information for Minnesota readers.  Nelson helped launch and manage the Bring Me The News Radio Network, which provided more than 50 radio stations around Minnesota with daily news, sports and weather reports from 2011-17.