This is really a continuation of the roughly 12 page thread with a little twist. Everyone be nice!
I don't like the concept of contact vs. power hitting. There was a lot of discussion around this without coming out and saying it. Not everyone can consistently hit the ball far. Not everyone has 6.4 speed. Taveras with the Astros probably batted less than .200 when you take away his bunts and infield hits -- but you don't take them away. Barry and Albert are not going to lay a drag bunt down for the team (usually) -- nor should they.
As the hitting coach, we should help each hitter get more power and each hitter get more contact. We also shouldn't tell a hitter he is a contact or power guy. It doesn't help. So called contact hitters have to have enough power to get the ball through the infielders and power guys have to have enough contact to hit the ball often enough. The difference is in elevation. The fast guys should have line-drive to downward trajectory and the bashers from line-drive to upward trajectory. It is a statistical fact that OPS (On-base + slugging) explains runs scored more than any other stat. It is also true that bashers will walk more than fast guys because of intentional walks and unintentional walks because of avoiding the heart of the strike zone.
In addition to coaching different attribute sets of the players, I see hitting coaches try to clone all their hitters. Which is why I ask, do you teach all your students the same thing? All hitters in the major leagues look different -- there is a fingerprint to a swing. Bad hitting coaches mess with the fingerprint all the time and try to teach how something worked for them.
A couple of case studies. When Tony Gwynn won his last batting title, he was less than 30th in run production per plate appearance. The year before last when many were calling for Bagwell to retire, he as just over 40th in run production per plate appearance. With 30 teams and 8 to 9 hitters per team -- that was really good! BA, OB or OPS do not matter in baseball, plating runs is what matters. Power produces the most runs and the most walks. However, should I change Tony's swing as a hitting coach? Ted Williams thought so. He told Tony if he elevated the ball more he would have a lower batting average, but would produce more runs for the team.
Hitting coaches that only teach one way probably teach how they did it, or the one way they learned it and not what is best for the hitter. However, you do not have to have played the game to be able to teach -- you do have to have played the game to gain credibility with most baseball players. That is just a fact. There are really good golf instructors who cannot play, but they know mechanics. I know mechanics OK for a Papa but would never have credibility with a lot of players. I have no problem with that.
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