quote:
Anyone have any drills or anything on how to imporve balance. I always seem to be falling towards the plate. Im thinking that if i start wiht more weight on my back foot this could help with me staying back and keeping over my balance point. any suggestions would be helpful.
So the kid asks for some drills to improve balance and you guys get into a debate over who knows more about balance points?
The truth is the body does not stop and reach a dead stop balance point. The balance point that this young man is referring to is the point at which the front leg/hip gets to it’s maximum height and takes an ever so slight (milliseconds) pause before going forward and getting released in the pitchers move forward.
The balance points are great teaching tools like someone said. All teams should incorporate balance drills into their throwing programs.
Some EASY balance drills:
1) Stand in front of a mirror- Assume the stretch position, set your hands like you are holding a runner on, lift you front leg to 90 deg. (it should be parallel to the ground), point your toe to the ground. Your ankle should be directly under your knee not curled under your rear.
HOLD THIS BALANCE POINT FOR 30 SEC.
Be sure you have good posture on the top half and keep your arms and hands still but ready.
DO THIS 5x each session DO 3 sessions a day
2) Repeat the same drill and add in the breaking of the hands and getting the arms into a good throwing position. Arms should break together and shoulders should lift the arms to parallel to the ground. Work on being strong with your shoulders at this balance point.
HOLD THIS BALANCE POINT FOR 30 SEC.
Be sure that you can hold your balance on the bottom half when you break your hands on the top half. Lots of pitchers get in trouble balancing their bodies while they get the ball into a good throwing position.
3) Go outside with a buddy. Do #1 for 5 sec. #2 for 5 sec. then take your front hip/foot and your front elbow to your buddy and throw. Make sure you balance the finish just as much as you balanced the start. Do 10-15 from 25’ and back up 10-15’ every 10-15 throws until your reach your max.
If you are looking for other drills PM me and I will help you out. You will never get better at balance unless you work on balancing your body in spots that relate to pitching. I tell my pitchers all the time when we do balance drills to death, "If you can't balance your body now in the gym with perfect footing how do you expect to balance your body when you are on pitch 82 in the 90 degree heat and there is a 6" hole in the mound and in your landing area?"
Work on balance when you are warming up before every game. Take 5-7 throws from each distance you move back and work on balancing your body slowly from each spot before you get to your actual throwing speed. I have found in HS pitchers that slowing the body down a little will help teach you how to speed it up in the right parts and be balanced enough to repeat it 60-80 times a start or 10-15 times a relief.
Keep working hard,
Justin Stringer
Do It Right Baseball
Lane Tech Baseball
www.doitrightbaseball.comHSBASEBALLWEB SPONSOR