Teacherman,
quote:
To me it means......"Is he throwing what he's capable of"...."How far off is he?"...."What do we need to do to get him to his potential?"
A huge difference.
I guarantee you don't know a 2-5 mph differential by sight.
Therefore, you don't know whether a pitcher is throwing his velocity potential or not.
Therefore, you may not know when a pitcher needs mechanical work.
I agree with everything that you say in the above quote.
I use the gun as a training tool and to see if he is maintaining velocity. I did not need one my son's senior year there were plenty of scouts that had them and parents would tellme after every inning what my son's velocity was. Everybody wants to know and many parents would stand behind and watch.
Coach May
quote:
Guns don't kill people, people kill people. Radar guns are not the problem the people using them are the problem.
LOL
I choose not to take one to the game, but I don't judge others for wanting to. When I go to my son's games, I try to sit where I can see the team gun. I do that so I can help judge his mechanics. As much as you guys want to discout velocity training, velocity is still the benchmark for scouts. If you don't believe me, see how many right handed pitchers drafted are throwing below 90 in the top 10 rounds.Very few. Almost none out of hs.
I just don't understand coaches hating the gun irrationally. "Oh my god. he may overthrow now" Absurd. good players don't notice and the others shouldn't have it turned on them. Why a blanket rule. Just use common sense.
I also agree with bbscout and endorse fungo's post!