The first pitch of a team’s season may not actually mean or portend anything, but it’s pretty special to a lot of people. It means baseball is back.

Using MLB.com’s Gameday data, I tracked every team’s first pitch of the season. Here’s what I found*:

Nobody swings. Of the 30 first pitches, 29 were taken. Only Ben Zobrist swung and he produced a single off of Jeremy Guthri e grounded out to first base.

e grounded out to first base. Among those were 17 called strikes, 12 balls, and the one pitch that Zobrist decided to swing at.

Fastballs, naturally, ruled the day. There were 19 four-seam fastballs, two two-seamers, four sinkers, two changeups, a slider, and a splitter.

Brett Myers and Carl Pavano were responsible for the changeups, Yovani Gallardo for the slider, and Ubaldo Jimenez threw the split-finger.

Felix Hernandez, Jon Lester, Clayton Kershaw, and David Price tied for the fastest first pitches at 94 mph.

Livan Hernandez threw the slowest pitch at 81 mph with Mark Buehrle second at 83 mph. Both pitches were fastballs.

Those pitches were slower than both Brett Myers and Carl Pavano’s changeups which were clocked at 85 and 87 mph.

The average four-seam velocity was 91 mph. Remove Hernandez and Buehrle from the equation and the average jumps to 92 mph.

*Note: There was no Pitchf/x or radar information for Luke Hochevar who threw a ball.