Hitting lessons,
One lesson per. week thirty minutes or other wise at$35bucks per. half an hour is a pure waste of time and money, there is not a person any where major league or otherwise who is worth that kind of money unless maybe they are excellent teachers of which there are very few of any where in baseball clear up to and including the major leagues, teaching is an art and unless one has done much more than just playing, like taking the time to study and become excellent students of the game which very few players do, they certainly are not teachers and this is the main reason that so many hitters fail miserably and do not make it in pro-ball, and is also the main reason that there are numerous unnecessary chronic arm problems,blown out arms and operations from the major leagues on down to our youth as young as 13-14 yrs.old because there is virtually no one qualified to each them how to use their whole body from the ground up which when executed properly alleviates the abuse and strain on the arm that the unnatural act of throwing a baseball creates. the recreational clubs or the smart people who want to learn suggest to do so within at least a three day cycle, 1st, middle and last of a week on a regular basis so they are on a regular cycled learning curve and can retain what they learn and never have to keep going back to square one at each next lesson, as I mentioned, being a major league player or even a coach certainly does not qualify one as a teacher,three major league coaches held a baseball camp at a college in kansas a few years ago and they wasted their time and the players time due to the fact they were not teachers in any sense of the word and they could not communicate with the players The lack of qualified teachers from the major league level on down certainly is prevalent in all of baseball and the players arecertainly suffering from it, it is like Joe Morgan,Rob Ellis and others say that baseball needs to be brought back to the way it was originally meant to be played.
All pros and cons are certainly welcome.
Don Ervin
kom_ervin@yahoo.com