Feole Pitching | Pitching Lessons & Velocity Training in Rhode Island & New England
01
Rhode Island ✕ New England pitching development

Pitchers
train different.
Most programs miss this.

Pro-led pitching development based in Rhode Island, working with New England arms and pitchers nationwide. Capped spots, a direct line to your coach, and a plan built off your film — not a template.

02
The board

The 90+
velo club.

The board on the facility wall, in full. Every arm that touches 90 in-program gets a line — 87 names on it today, six of them at triple digits.

The 90+ Velo Club whiteboard at the Feole Pitching facility, listing 87 pitchers and their top velocities
The actual board · Rhode Island facility
FP. 90+ Velo Club
100+ mph 95–99 90–94
  • Coleman102
  • Burdi101
  • K. McCarthy101
  • Kiker101
  • Conte100
  • Bowie100
  • Watters99
  • Kramkowski99
  • Little99
  • Episcope99
  • Hartman99
  • Benoit98
  • Bevis98
  • A. Clemmey98
  • Krieger98
  • Sittinger97.5
  • Denomme97.5
  • Wyatt97.4
  • Mikolas97.3
  • Allmer97
  • McDevitt97
  • Morgan97
  • Staine97
  • Gallegos97
  • Mendoza97
  • Francis97
  • A. Smith96.4
  • L. White96
  • Fogell96
  • E. Paulino96
  • P. Clemmey96
  • Weaver96
  • Scudder95.8
  • Shafer95.7
  • Hartsell95.2
  • Lavigueur95
  • Rossy95
  • Vanderwater95
  • Helsel95
  • Tabor95
  • Nielson95
  • Bosley-Smith95
  • Fennel95
  • Renkow95
  • Franco95
  • Flaherty95
  • Kelsey95
  • Hasegawa94
  • Morin94
  • Aber94
  • J. Smith94
  • Sharman94
  • Castrachini94
  • Gambardella94
  • Urian94
  • Edgar94
  • Walker94
  • Haggerty94
  • J. McLaughlin94
  • Potvin93.8
  • Samuels93.3
  • Jergian93
  • D. McLaughlin93
  • Mulligan93
  • D. McCarthy93
  • Fulginite93
  • Boucher93
  • Blanusa93
  • Bogue93
  • Greene93
  • Dombrowski93
  • Nichols93
  • Haas93
  • Pascarelli92.7
  • A. Paulino92
  • Tahnk92
  • Burnes92
  • J. Morgan92
  • Mascott92
  • Tawa92
  • Rose91
  • Dowdle91
  • Pires91
  • Robinson91
  • Stroud91
  • Keller91
  • Charney91
87 arms · 6 at 100+ · updated as they get on the gun
03
Case studies

Drafted. Traded.
Called up.

MLB rebuilds to high school velo jumps. Every arm below came in with a specific problem and left with it solved — then got drafted, traded, called up, or committed.

See the Instagram post
Featured · MLB Rebuild

Dylan Coleman

Former Royals reliever with 98+ velo and a 2.78 ERA in 2022. Released by the Orioles in May with the strike zone gone and the velo down to 95. A summer of mechanical overhaul with Mason — added a cutter, added a power sinker, fastball back to triple digits. Signed a minor league deal with the New York Yankees in January.

100 mph FB Cutter + Sinker added Yankees · Jan 2026
See the Instagram post
MLB · Return From Injury

Luke Little

6'8" Cubs lefty. Lost the back half of '24 to a lat strain. Back up to 96 touching 99 — with a new sinker replacing the old splitter — and back on the active roster in 2026.

96 · T99 New sinker
See the Instagram post
Pro · Brewers (5th rd)

Sean Episcope

Princeton RHP. Came back from his first Tommy John, threw four starts of dominance — 0.55 WHIP, 26 K in 20 IP, two-time Ivy League Pitcher of the Week. Highest Princeton pick since 2009.

5th rd · 2025 3,000+ rpm CB
See the Instagram post
Featured · 2026 MLB Draft

Kaiden McCarthy

Sat 87 mph as an underclassman. Sits 97-99 this spring. Vermont Academy ace, reclassified up to the 2026 class, committed to Tennessee, and put himself firmly in the early-round conversation for July's draft. The biggest velo unlock the program has produced.

87 → 99 mph Tennessee commit 2026 Draft prospect
See the Instagram post
Pro · Mets → White Sox

Truman Pauley

Harvard mechanical engineering major who walked nearly a batter an inning as a freshman. As a sophomore, led the Ivy League in strikeouts (91), held opponents to a .171 average, and carried a no-hitter into the 9th vs. Princeton with 12 K's. 12th round to the Mets — and the centerpiece arm in the Luis Robert Jr. trade to Chicago.

91 K · Ivy lead .171 opp BA 20" iVB FB
See the Instagram post
HS · Clemson Commit

Chase Kiker

Charlotte two-way kid, Metrolina Christian. FB sitting 92-94, slider with sweeper action at 2,643 rpm, and a real knuckleball as a chase pitch. Local arm, big-time profile.

92-94 FB 2,643 rpm SL
See the Instagram post
D1 · Sophomore Reset

Josh McDevitt

Top-20 Illinois prep arm out of Effingham, T96 in HS. Worked his way back from a rough freshman year at Mizzou — then went 7 IP, 8 K vs. South Carolina in SEC play as a junior.

SEC · Mizzou 7 IP / 8 K
04
The work

Velocity. Arsenal.
Execution.

Three things separate the guys who climb levels from the guys who stall. We obsess over all three — at the same time, not in isolation.

P / 01

Velocity, healthy

Velocity is leverage. We build it through movement quality, intent, and load that's managed to the individual — so the gains hold up across a season, not just a bullpen.

P / 02

Arsenal, your way

Stop forcing the textbook 4-pitch mix. We design pitch shapes around what your arm wants to do — building the 2 weapons that win counts before stacking the third and fourth.

P / 03

In-game execution

The pen doesn't matter if you fall apart Friday night. We script sequencing, mound routine, and pre-game loading so the work shows up under the lights.

05
Programs

Pick the
track.

Same coach. Same standard. Two ways to deliver it — pick what fits where you are right now.

Track 01 · Remote

Train remote.

Send the video. Get the plan. Weekly check-ins. The most accessible way into the program — and how most of the pros train through their season.

  • Custom throwing, lifting & mobility
  • Weekly video reviews + adjustments
  • Direct text + call line to your coach
  • Arsenal design + pitch shape work
  • In-season scripting & pen plans
  • Recovery & workload management
Best forAnyone serious enough to commit to the work — anywhere in the country.
Start remote
Track 02 · In-Person · Rhode Island

Train in person.

Multi-day intensives at the Rhode Island facility. Every visit starts on the NewtForce instrumented mound — it measures the ground force you produce through the delivery, front leg to release, so we can see where velocity is being left on the table instead of guessing. Then live bullpens with real-time adjustments. The room pro arms fly into when they need a reset.

  • Multi-day on-site sessions
  • Full biomechanical assessment
  • NewtForce instrumented mound data
  • Hands-on movement & delivery work
  • Live bullpens + real-time adjustments
  • Remote training included
Best forPros, college guys in the offseason, motivated HS arms who can travel to Rhode Island.
Plan a visit
06
Why this

An accountable coach
for accountable athletes.

There's no house method to buy here. Every pitcher is his own case study: break down the player's specific reality, find the constraint, train against it until it shows up in games.

Built by a pitcher

Coached by someone who's been there.

Most pitching coaches never threw a professional inning. Mason did. He also rehabbed two surgeries to get back to one. That changes how he programs volume, how he reads bullpens, and how he talks to arms coming off injuries — it's lived knowledge, not borrowed.

Limited spots

A real coach. Not a group chat.

Velo factories scale by handing you off: templates, group chats, a new face every month. Spots here are capped so your coach knows your arm, your history, and your season. Video review, texts, calls — one line, nothing outsourced.

Diagnosis first

Every pitcher is a case study.

Same drills, same lifts, same pitch shapes for every arm — that's how the big shops run. Here the plan starts with your film and your history: find what's actually costing you outs, then build the work around that. The plan comes from the player, not a binder.

In-season too

The work has to survive Friday night.

Off-season gains are easy to claim. Holding them across an SEC weekend, a full pro season, or a college fall is the real test. We script the in-season week — pen days, sequencing, recovery — so the development shows up when it counts.

07
The team

Built around a pro.
Backed by a staff.

Mason Feole built the program and sets the standard. A hand-picked staff runs the day-to-day coaching — strength, throwing, recovery — so the standard holds at ten arms or a hundred.

Mason Feole

Owner · Lead Development Coach

There's no house philosophy here. There's a discipline: treat every pitcher as his own case study. Break down the arm in front of you — mechanics, movement, history — and fix what's actually costing him on the field.

He's a feel-first coach with a film-and-data spine. Tommy John, two organ surgeries, more time on the IL than the active roster — that career taught him what most coaches never have to learn: that the answer is rarely the same twice, and that progress comes from understanding the player in front of you, not applying a formula to them.

  • 2019
    Drafted, San Diego Padres (11th rd)
  • 2018
    USA Baseball Collegiate National Team
  • UConn
    All-time strikeout leader (278 K's)
  • Now
    Coaching pro, college, and high-end HS arms
“How Mason coaches you isn't through mechanical changes. He gives you ways to move that help you feel the mechanical changes. That's something that helped me a lot.” — Zach Fogell · Boston Red Sox pitching prospect
08
How it works

Inside
the program.

The plan is custom because the intake is real: film, movement screen, injury history, metrics. Then the work begins — and gets adjusted every week off what your arm reports back.

01

Onboarding Assessment

We start with a deep intake — movement screen, throwing video, history, goals, and metrics from your last bullpen or outing. This is where the program gets sharp instead of generic.

02

1-on-1 With Your Coach

Direct line. Calls, texts, video reviews — as much as you'll use, none of it outsourced.

03

Throwing Program

Plyo work, distance shaping, intent days, recovery days. Built around your arm's signal — not the calendar.

04

Lifting & Mobility

Pitcher-specific lifting that talks to your throwing — built to support output, not compete with it.

05

Arsenal Design

Pitch shape work using video and (where available) ball-flight data. We find the 2-3 pitches that are uniquely yours.

06

In-Season Execution

The off-season work only matters if it shows up Friday night. We script the week — pre-game loading, pen days, pitch sequencing — so the development holds when the lights come on.

Apply now

Limited spots
available.

A limited number of spots open each cycle. Every application gets a personal read and an answer within 48 hours.

  • Direct 1-on-1 access to your coach
  • Custom throwing + lifting + mobility
  • Arsenal redesign + in-game scripting
  • Application is free — no obligation

Arms in the Yankees, Cubs, Red Sox, Brewers, and White Sox systems train here.

  1. 01
    ApplyTakes 3 minutes. No cost, no obligation.
  2. 02
    30-minute callWe talk through your arm, your goals, and whether it's a fit both ways.
  3. 03
    PlacementIf it's a match, we lock your spot and start.
09
FAQs

Things you'll
probably ask.

If your question isn't here, it's in the application form — we'll answer personally.

How much does it cost?
Pricing depends on the track and the length of the engagement. Apply and we'll walk you through what fits — it's straightforward, not gated.
What equipment do I need?
A throwing sock (Durathro or similar), plyo balls, and resistance bands cover most athletes. Specialty tools are added based on your assessment — never bought blindly.
How is this different from other programs?
Capped spots, one-on-one coaching, and a plan built off your film and history instead of a template. If you want a famous facility and a binder, there are bigger names. If you want a coach who actually knows your arm, apply.
Can I be in-season and still train?
Yes. We program for high school spring seasons, college fall and spring, and pro seasons (affiliated and indy). The plan flexes around your outings, not the other way around.
How often do I talk to my coach?
Direct line via call, text, and video review — as much as you want. Spots are limited on purpose so the access stays real.
Is there an age minimum?
A typical training day runs 90–120 minutes of focused work. Most athletes are 14+ and ready to commit to that. If you're younger and serious, apply anyway — we'll have a conversation.
What results can you guarantee?
None. The athletes who follow the work day in and day out have all gotten better. We bring the diagnosis and the plan. You bring the work ethic.