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As my hair grows gray I look back at the many approaches I have seen and used and I draw some conclusions. One is that maybe you have to use different methods for different levels of athletes.

Some younger kids and those with less ability to synch with the pitcher might need to start in a position closer to the launch point.... Wider stance, shorter stride, bat already cocked. You can win some LL titles like this and Garciaparra did well too,

The high level swing has more arm and hand action. When pitching the thumbs break down. In batting, the same move occurs as the top hand cocks and internally rotates the real elbow.
( Thanks Tom Guerry) The cocking of the bat and internal loading of the shoulders synch with the stride to balance it , limit it , and work opposite of it to create dymanic stretch and torque. It is easy when the pattern is modeled after the pitching motion and gives the most power with less head movement and less tugging on the handle. You can handle oppo easily.

Your player must be able to start his motion in synch with the pitcher. Many young players cannot/ will not do this as it puts them in the line of flight to get hit if the pitch is off line. Unfortunately the optimum hitting position is the most vulnerable for the batter because his muscle activity is on offense not defense

These guys will have to 'shorten up". I define this is getting cloer to the launch position, take away the arm and hand action some of the stride, and they will lose some oppo potential and some power. The amount they lose is masked by the aluminum bat....but it is a lot.
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Texan,

The arm and hand action starts with a very very relaxed upper body in constrast to a preloaded position. This alone shifts the focus to the lower body and the hip/hand nuero connection tends to lead the load. The upper body is forced to load dynamically from this starting position and the timing like all timing cannot be taught.

You read about "when the pitcher starts to show you his butt;you show him yours etc". But can we really teach that? I think it is about a good swing then much live arm practice. We all know about when it should happen and sometimes we tell kids that but does it help...I don't know?

As far as change ups, they will always get their share of people out. Even for no stride , if the arm action doesn't match the ball speed your still screwed up. While hitters are practicing great mechanics so are the pitchers. That is why it is a great game.

Tom Writes:
The rear arm action sequence is the same as in the overhand throw where you break the hands with elbows up and palms down (or out) which kinesiologically you might describe as abduction and internal rotation of the throwing/back arm (humerus).This arm action interrupts/prevents any excessive backturn/counterrotation as the bat is coked. The sequence then goes on to prduce "pre-launch tht" as the bat turns back to the catcher/begins to uncok,then "tht at launch" which optimizes trunk coil dynamics (creates "x-factor stretch") to set up consistent and quick unloading.

When you can dig out what is happening here it is simple and it IS how many great hitters swing if you look frame by frame. Even Babe Ruth.

For those that will never teach arm action do one thing for me. Put your bat barrel in the 45 degree launch slot and measure how far your lead elbow is from your left pect muscle. Now put the hands stacked almost vertical and close to your right collar bone...WHERE IS YOUR LEAD ELBOW? it is almost touching your pect now. Which is tension free? How much tension is in your arm at hand break pitching? Would it help to put yuour hand back in the power throwing psoition and muscle up?

When you start the bat in the 45 slot then go vertical and back to the 45 launch slot your lead elbow works tight to the pect muscle as the stride begins and the hips are rotating and the lead shoulder locks into the rotation before the bat starts to flatten at true launch. The hips are ahead of the hands naturally just like pitching. Imagine how speed would be lost pitching if your hips and your shoulders turning to throw at exactly the same time and in the same phase.

Some say learn to turn over and over to help hitter get it. But how? You will learn to turn when what your doing helps you to turn. Projecting the bat barrel correctly through the zone aids give you the feeling that the turn is connected and working without rushing to the ball. It compliments the turn and follow through. You cannot take a bad swing and practice it until you turn well. Your working against mother nature and physics.

There is a strong tendency to chicken wing and tug the handle in many players..especially RH hitters that throw RH. They seem to be benefited by this arm and hand action.
Last edited by swingbuster
quote:
I'm having trouble with the equating of the pitcher's break (thumbs down) with the batter's swing. Just not following that.



When a batter cocks the bat the top hand thumb work downward and the rear elbow upward. Good pitching is thumbs down at hand break and rear elbow works up. Same move.........What follows is the hips coil as they begin their stride..same move.Rear elbow internally rotate..same move

Sorry for the long post, I had time to kill Razz
Last edited by swingbuster
Fungo, I am only me, I assure you......I have no other identity on this board.....

I consider Swingbuster a good and sincere guy.....However, we do differ on some aspects of hitting technique.....Linear and myself probably totally agree as we are both students of a person we greatly respect whose name cannot be mentioned on this board.....And, our belief system is a result of what we have learned from this person through many hours of listening and trial and error........I have grown tired of arguing with people about this stuff......Linear is much more resilient than me and I applaud him for his efforts......There is much to be learned from him.......If people would just listen and trial and error......
Timing is a brain effort.....What's important is when the front foot goes down, not up......If the body is moving efficiently, the brain will know when to put the front foot down whether the pitch is fastball or offspeed.....It's about learning to move the middle properly (weight shift momentum and rotation).......And, it won't work without connection by the hands and arms.....There is no rotation without connection......When the hands and arms go independent and lose the connection with the shoulders, the link is broken and the rotation stops......
quote:
It's also interesting that you didn't comment on the pause in the load/unload that you teach.


If you hand any novice player a bat and say hit this ball coming at you maybe 1 in 1000 will get his front foot down on time and rotate into it's path( Bonds description of his swing not mine).

Breaking the steps down is a way to teach players to learn to turn. You cannot rotate when the front foot is in the air at bat launch. It is a drill station and a very popular one based on sales and currect use.

The icing on the cake ( as evidenced by many Hall of Famers) is the synchronization of an upper body that also learns how to turn inconcert with the lower body. The arm and hand action is the "running start" of the upper body to get in orbit around the core move. If done improperly it is disaster and results in many of baseballs worst swing flaws

Just as the hips coil , the short stride is taken and the hips uncoil, there is a similar pattern ( available to those that chose to use and learn it) that the upper body uses to interface with the lower to make the total movement the most effective.

If you cannot see it in 100s of clips then you do not chose to see it and that is fine. Or maybe those in your charge hit well without it and thats fine too. THere are some clips that support that style too.
Last edited by swingbuster
quote:
If you cannot see it in 100s of clips then you do not chose to see it and that is fine. Or maybe those in your charge hit well without it and thats fine too. THere are some clips that support that style too.


Yes, many HOF's get/got a running start. Yes, many mlb clips will show the running start. Just as many will show something different.

The problem is you teach arm action as the key. The difference maker. The thing most players are missing. The thing that "if they'd just do this" they'd have success.

That couldn't be further from the truth. What the best do is load their center and create momentum by carrying the load into launch. And then, rotate with good connection.

Most call this carrying move a stride. The word stride is so far from accurate that it is has the same value as "arm action" when it comes to hitting. It has none. Most interpret a stride as similar to a "walking" stride. Simply getting momentum from which to swing with. Its very different from that. In fact, the feet don't even have to move to carry the momentum forward. In fact, something else happens which causes the "stride" or "momentum" shift. In other words, there really isn't a stride. There is a carrying move that moves the foot. If in fact it moves at all.

The actual "move" or "cause" is up the chain. What most see, the foot move, (and call it a stride), is a result of a something else going on.

And this carrying move, or momentum shift, and it's immediate unload at foot touch down is key. And your device teaches something completely different.

Pay attention to the time between foot touch down of a hitter and the launch of his swing as compared to touch down of a player using your device and the launch of his swing.

Maybe, if they hit the ball on the way up it would have value. Otherwise......you're not helping anyone. And a very good case can be made that you are hurting hitters.

Your interest in arm action defines why you think the device is good. The problem is, arm action will not make you a hitter. Learning to properly load, carry and unload the center will.

Your obsession with "hands back" isn't most hitters problem. Most hitters problem is they don't understand the load and carry move. If they did, their hands wouldn't be a problem. At least "hands back" wouldn't be a problem.

You mention your success helping youth hitters by moving their hands back and preloading them. Not a bad move for a coach and his youth hitters. At least it gets them to have some success. The problem is, at that level, they rarely face the need for, and notice their lack of, swing quickness. So, your band aid works.

But, as they advance, they will have to learn something completely different to be successful. They will have to learn to load their center, create momentum by carrying the load into foot touch and launch with good connected rotation. Otherwise they will never develop the swing quickness to "catch up" to the pitching speeds they have to face.
Last edited by Linear
Linear

For a guy who degrades every other approach you have shown us nothing

You, and bluedog , are still shills for the guy you cannot mention--he of the claymotion images

Show us something and perhaps we can believe you

Based on what you have shown I wouldn't let my grandmother take lessons from you for no cost.
Mommy, mommy.....

The record will show that TR threw the first punch, I countered, and now he's whining about it.

Swingbuster and I are/were having our discussion. Each was supporting their views with substance, and each poster/lurker could make a decision on their own about who to follow. OR, unlike some, could decide they don't care and read elsewhere.

How about we short circuit the entire discussion and just assume It's and Glove Man threw their punches, I countered them into oblivion, and then mommy told us to stop.

It will save everyone time.
Last edited by Linear
Linear...please explain how you teach players to "load the center". what are your key teaching points you tell the guys

I am obsessed with "how the hands get back". Certain movement patterns assist the shoulder loading making that move more natural for many players.

The shoulder and hips work in concert and how can the center be discussed if it doesn't include both...does it?

If the stride moves weight to keep the center of gravity under the rotation what moves the shoulders back?

How do you tell people to do this?
Last edited by swingbuster
I found this post of interest and enjoyed the opinions and the give and take.

Discussing hitting in person is tough enough, online is nearly impossible but it is still interesting and thought provoking at times.

However, just like it used to be when I frequented more, some people can’t leave the thread alone even though he has nothing substantive to share. It’s the same type of garbage that wore me out from posting.

This is a great site for the most part! Some add a little humor; some add a little logic and some people share their experience. However a few people seem to think they need to jump into every thread just to see their words on the screen, I guess?

It’s too bad because not only does it mess up that thread for others; it also wrecks the thread wrecker’s credibility in the threads they may actually have something to contribute.

I remember others using the analogy that it might make sense to approach this forum like a buffet. It’s all right to pick and choose. You don’t have to eat everything, every time. If it doesn’t make you sick, it will probably make others around you sick.

Merry Christmas to all.
Last edited by SBK
Swingbuster, I won't indulge in this topic too much since I've vowed to not go mud wrestling. However, we load with a slight (SLIGHT) rotation of the shoulders. We also have gone almost exclusivly to "Heal-Toe" for our base. This enables us to "coil" or "flex" and be ready to uncoil. We picked this up from the baseball Cardinals. Pujos and Edmonds both do this in their own ways. Listen as they both hit one day on the field.
quote:
Swingbuster, I won't indulge in this topic too much since I've vowed to not go mud wrestling. However, we load with a slight (SLIGHT) rotation of the shoulders. We also have gone almost exclusivly to "Heal-Toe" for our base. This enables us to "coil" or "flex" and be ready to uncoil. We picked this up from the baseball Cardinals. Pujos and Edmonds both do this in their own ways. Listen as they both hit one day on the field.


Thanks for an honest, sincerely reply
My simple point is this. You can keep your same base( I personally like it) and experiment
( yes they will not break) with different hand positions and bat slots. **** the bat
( tipping toward the pitcher)out from the rear collar bone at about the same height. Have the bottom hand under the top and the bat in a verticle plane ( as seen from behind).This will facilitate a great shoulder load ( as natural as throwing) and all you have to say is "start it there and relax your hands and hit". Watch what happens .....
bluedog

I have to say the feeling is mutual--between you and linear, I have seen nothing-- at least swingbuster brings something to the table and I am not one who is into what I term "hitting gadgets" .He is realistic and makes sense and he has a purpose

You and your alter ego simply regurgiate what the claymation dolls show us--nothing at all original.

As for being lost I think not. At least I do not shill for others
Swingbuster, we want the bat in a 45 degree angle past the hitter's ear. We've had success with that. However, we won't change a hitter until they prove to us that they need changing. We use the top shoulders and hands as a unit. They rotate slightly all together. I can't stress enough slight rotation. Some people try to do this and move a couple of inches. That destroys the whole thing. We do teach hands and I know several here do not. However, we teach hands only when it becomes apparent that they are trying to swing around the ball and not to the ball. To set the hands where we want them, often all we really have to do is the rolled up towel under the lead arm's armpit. As per the back shoulder, I think someone alluded to that in this thread. We don't coach that other than to say relaxed and comfortable.

Oh, the bat at a 45 degree - here is how we arrived at that. Say you were in an alley with a bat and a bad man came along to attack you. How would you hold that bat if you had to fight for your life. I'm betting you would load it in a 45 degree angle. We simply are letting our hitters do what their instincts tell them to do. JMHO!
Last edited by CoachB25
quote:
...all we really have to do is the rolled up towel under the lead arm's armpit...


It's impossible to execute a high level swing with a towel being held in the lead arm armpit.

The lead arm (upper arm) must be perpendicular to the spine for maximum rotational efficiency and swing quickness.

Without that you lose the box and the body's ability to properly transfer energy up the chain.

By holding the lead arm down (holding something in the armpit) you can not effectively meet the proper pitch plane. By that I mean you can not transfer maximum energy to the ball while still meeting the pitch plane.

Beyond that a low lead arm is a major cause of early roll over.

If you want to hold a volleyball or basketball under the armpit, maybe. But, not a towel.
Last edited by Linear
Linear, to each their own. Disagree but then again, that is the norm for most things. Perhaps you know a better method. This works well for us. You can reference our hitting stats anytime. You know the site where those stats are kept. Pressure under the armpit? We are not putting pressure there. They aren't trying to get their elbow flush to their side. BTW, do you realize how big a towel rolled up is. In no way is their elbow next to their side.

We seem to be just fine getting our lead arm in the right place.


Perpendicular to the spine - to me Perpendicular means a 90 degree angle. So you teach to point your lead elbow to the pitcher?
Last edited by CoachB25
Linear writes...It's impossible to execute a high level swing with a towel being held in the lead arm armpit.

The lead arm (upper arm) must be perpendicular to the spine for maximum rotational efficiency and swing quickness""



It is NOT impossible to begin a high level swing there. Thats is what you don't see. Getting the bat out of plane on purpose forces the hands to move back , the bat to flatten, as you launch and is what increases torque and bat speed through hips shoulder separation. Why doesn't the pitcher just start with this hand back in the throwing position , turn and throw. What is the purpose of over lapping the upperbody take away and the lower body hips rotation to the plate

Starting on the 45 works for some and for some they are actually too quick to the ball and tug the knob. It is hard to project the barrel from there. You also have a tendency to start early and more difficulty with offspeed.

Again see Babe Ruth, Bo Jackson, Chipper, Kirby Puckett, Piazza, Giambi,Glaus. If you look close many start on 45, lower the lead elbow, cocking and making the bat go out of plane toward vertical and return to the 45 slot( as always ) at launch. Their hips **** , shoulders load, bat knob comes out toward oppo batter box, the barrel is perp to to ball flight.

If you have a kid that is not performing up to par just let them try it. It takes one minute to switch back.
Last edited by swingbuster
quote:
...Thats is what you don't see.


The arguments you make are laughable at best.

Does CoachB25's drill (holding a towel under the lead armpit) allow for the player to drop the towel?

If so why do it?

It's impossible to HOLD the folded towel there and get the arm perpendicular to the spine at any point in the swing. Takes too much pressure to hold the towel and deal with the forces generated by the swing.

Finally, a still picture is the worst when it comes to analyzing what a hitter did or did not do. But, for anyone interested, this hitter is totally disconnected as he hits the ball. Not an ALL bad thing IF he made a great adjustment on the fly. And, he may have hit this ball out of the park. But, what is demonstrated in that still photo is not a high quality swing.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
Linear

Show us something--so far all words and regurgitation from a claymation site-- join the real world--- I am waiting for the VIDEO


OLD MAN

I'm trying to ignore you. You came here yesterday to start ****. You spewed all over yourself. Then Blue Dog called you out. I stayed out of it rather than incite further. Now, here you are starting **** again.

You can't play with the big boys. Stay in the recruiting forums. Your knowledge there is good.
Last edited by Linear
Gordie Gillespie invented the Gillespie Vest to be used basically the same as the towel under the arm. It was a device with 2 straps. One large one went around the player at chest height and a second smaller one strapped around the bicept of the lead arm and attached to the larger strap. This held the front arm, not tight, but close to the body. It is a great muscle memory tool. Even though he's an old man he coached a few wins in college baseball.

Signed,
Fence Driller
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
I'll recognize sincere and considerate when just once, for the first time, one of you call out TR publicly like you do me and others.


Linear - IMO.

You can disagree with anyone. Vehemently if you like.
You and TR and anyone else for that matter can say that the other person is clueless - or wrong - or has no idea what they are talking about.

But please - leave age, gender, race and religion out of it. Be civil.

I think that is a basic foundation for the rules of the HSBBWEB.

That is all I am saying - and all I have been saying for many years now.

Smile
Last edited by itsinthegame
Linear,


Nothing is uncivil about our discussion.
That being said:
IMO

The subject was about teaching hitting.

If you feel you have something to add - put it out there.

If folks disagree - defend yourself.
Shoot - I do it all the time.

Just defend yourself without the negative personal stuff.

If you know what you are talking about - most people will see that - or at least they will be exposed to something new or different IMO.

But when you get personal - it all goes in the garbage.

JMHO.
Last edited by itsinthegame
Just wanted to get everybody primed for the new year and see if anything had changed.

"The arguments you make are laughable at best".

Maybe so.

I hear the guys are teaching windmill pitching now. What's next? Maybe a whole series on how to do everything in slo motion. Karate, ice skating, lacrosse, riding derby horses, dicing onions, ............ It will all be presented with impecable accuracy.....and in the form of uncompromising LAW


Coach Butler...good luck with the season with those disconnected HR hitters. If they really connect somebody could get hurt. Your not bad for a paid , career coach Wink
Last edited by swingbuster
Buster

You can clear things up if you answer the question about whether the drill is designed to "hold" the towel the entire time.

If it is then, no, the arm doesn't get there. Not at the beginning. Not at the end. And, not between. Therefore, not a very good drill.

CoachB25

The video please. And, it's been a while since your last self promotion campaign.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
And TR doesn't get personal?


If he does, then that's his problem and not yours. Just cause someone else does, that don't mean that you can.
Not to be rude towards you, but TRHit gets personal because HE HELPS US! You don't. I've learned alot from Tom, a bit about recuiting and showcases, AND also motivation and attitude adjustments towards my game. Even if you both coached an equal amount of players who you led to the Show as your credentials, Tom would still be ahead of you because he gets 'personal' in a very productive way.
It's nice that you post your view and method on hitting and stuff, but your method isn't the only method out there, so if someone disagrees, then don't get so defensive. There's more than one way to get things done in the game of baseball. You don't always have to be right. If you were always right, then you'd be a coach in the Majors. So please for the benefit of everyone-including yourself-just try to lighten up a little bit.
Last edited by Mr3000
Linear,

Like you, I am fairly up to date on what the most quoted guys think and say. I even remember you helping clear some things up for me a couple of years ago

Correct me if I am wrong...like I needed to say that haha but here goes

Ny*** has said" I can teach a high level swing with no arm and hand action".

I know because I internalized that and worked with it a long time. He went on to decribe the loading shoulders differentiating scap loading ( the shoulder unit rotating around the spine) vs counter rotation( turning inward with the whole body).

"No arm action" does work for many and I found that maybe it was better for guys that batted LH and threw RH. With the dominant hand on the bottom they seemed to get more angular displacement vs knob drag through the zone. Ny*** also showed the drag was rear elbow leading hands which is top hand dominance pulling the knob and minimal barrel projection. It was my observation that drag and hip slide seemed to occur in the same player

Upon listening to Mankin and Guerry and watching clips there seems to be another style/ method to get the barrel out there and have the upper body interface with the lower in a turn. Adding back the arm and hand action ( that basically) supports and enhances the scap loading that NY*** described helps many player and the list is too long.

Supporters of the start in the 45 slot and stay there speak about swing quickness and I do see HR derby swings with more arm and hand action that shortened up against 90 MPH pitchers but the same loading pattern is still there.

When the ball is half way home both hitting styles should arrive in the same position at launch.

I guess the core statement I have is that some players cannot scap load as well when you take away there arm and hand action. They need some dynamic movement pattern to help load and to get it in the correct launch position ( inside out)There is a greater likihood that the knob will start to the oppo box rather than drag with Mankins style loading. This will bring more barrel through the zone for people fighting bat drag and hip slide

These guys are much better hitters with it than without. For these guys that use it, they are not sacrificing quickness as the timing of the beginning move is sufficient to get them to launch just like the other guys.

I hear what the other camp says but it is not a true blanket statement. There is too much film to show differently. I have coached some players that are decidedly better hitters with arm and hand action for the above reasons. It is not the arm and hand action itself but the better hand position at toe touch that is created for them with the arm and hand action.

The old school cue " keep your front shoulder in" was an effort to keep the hands back inside at toe touch. It is simply saying the same thing because it is not hardly possible to do one without the other

An lets really define laughable...

Imagine taking all the MLB players that use arm and hand action for timing, loading and synching to the park and tell them to put their bat in the 45 slot and learn to turn better and bring your swing out of the middle and you will put up better numbers. Or tell them they are not quick enough to be a great player doing what they are doing. I can hear the laughter. I sure wouldn't be the one to say it.
Lastly, if baseball can find a dominican player in a jungle that can help the game they could certainly find me, you or set*** if they could make Andruw Jones quicker
Last edited by swingbuster
There is no dispute that players have different usage of their hands and arms.

The point here is you are teaching it as a "way to hit". A way to improve. Do this and you'll be better.

That is far from the truth.

The reason why a Sheffield or a Bonds or a any other "army" hitters do that is they because they can. They can generate better batspeed by doing so but that doesn't mean you or I can.

The difference is in their center. They already understand how to load/unload their center. They are experts at it. They have perfected it. Their quickness is maxed out. So, they then turn to improving batspeed. Quickness allows you to catch up to all the great pitching. Batspeed adds distance to their hits. They can do that. They are rock solid in their center. They can experiment with adding speed.

The problem is, you and I can't. And neither can 95% or more of the players we encounter. They don't have their center under control. They don't understand the load/unload process. They are not as quick as they need to be.

So, you come along and say "do this with your arms". At their current level of competition and quickness, they have success. They look at you like "wow, that really made a difference." Yet, 2, 3, 5 years down the road in no longer works. The pitching is much faster. The quality of the breaking pitches are much better. The reaction time is greatly diminished. And your students generate really good batspeed but can't get the barrel to the ball because it takes too long for them to launch.

Unless and until they learn connected rotation from their center their "arm action" style of hitting will take them as far as their athletic ability goes. As long as they are "athletically gifted" as much or more than the competition they will be fine.

But, to advance a far as they possibly can, they will need to add "skill" to their athletic ability.

This is why so many "obvious" D-1 stars don't make it very far in professional baseball. They have never added "skill" to their "athletic ability".

This is also why someone like John Olerud, who is known to have the one of the slowest batspeeds in professional baseball, has the success he had. I've heard his batspeed in considerably less than most mlb players. But his "skill" level is very high.

Finally, a good coach is one who knows the difference and won't let the players read his press clippings. The coach who tells a player what he needs to hear versus what he wants to hear is extremely valuable down the road. The problem is all the misinformation and therefore the lack of quality coaching at all levels of baseball.

In this country it is ridiculous how small a percentage of kids that reach the top level of the game. They have been very misguided. In fact, whether one makes it or not is purely chance or "luck of the draw". They "discover" what works purely by chance through their own trial and error. Nothing wrong with trial and error. That's how everyone learns. But, trial and error in this country is set back thousands of hours by things like "arm action" hitting philosophies.

I'm still waiting for video of the hitter.
Last edited by Linear
I went back and deleted a couple of posts following my own advice from the Illinois Forum. Being critical of what others teach for the sake of being critical doesn't get the job done. If it doesn't work for you suggest an alternative drill. To be critical and not make those recommendations of improved methods serves no positive purpose and only is done to incite. JMHO!
Last edited by CoachB25
Nice post Linear,

When I have a kid going good I leave him alone more than ever. Had a senior last year that came out for ball for the first time since he was 14 and we put him in the 45 slot, preloaded and he contributed many hits.

Our local HS team has a mixture of styles. About 3-5 arm action guys, a great Olerud type LH kid that hit several HRs as a 9th grader that just slides the bat out of that 45 slot and the barrel is all you notice moving, and the rest are solidly in the 45 slot at set up but I would not call great hitters.

I don't change any swings that are productive. I do find some that are struggling and IMO you just can't fix all of them with the lower half only.

Lastly,

I must question the implication that any of todays great hitters perfected the middle and then added upper body arm and hand action as icing on the cake applied at some later date to go to the next level for bat speed.

These is no evidence in the Science of Hitting that Williams supported or suggested a staggered system of learning to hit.

There was no evidence of this in Gwynn's book and I have seen no early Bond footage that their swing was a transitional process training the hips and progressing to include arm and hand action later.

There is no evidence in Dusty Bakers book either

IMO...The reason is that it did not happen that way for any of those guys nor can anybody give any supporting evidence that it did. The first written material supporting the superiority of that teaching style came from you know where. How great a contribution that really will be is still a question for me personally.
Last edited by swingbuster
Just because all the greats didn't think "load/unload the center" or "load my scap" or "set my posture" or "stay connected" that doesn't mean it's not what they were learning to do. In fact, that is exactly where their trial and error process took them. Today, we can shorten that process by paying attention to these "better defined" terms.

Over many many reptitions they learned (the hard way) about loading the center, creating momentum by caring the load forward and rotating with connection. Of course, the words we use now weren't used by them.

Only recently have these basic core movements had the new words connected to them. And, it was done by N y m a n. He didn't discover how to hit. But, he has learned to properly define the movements. Defining them so that what looks the same now has more meaning. Examples:

What is now "carrying your center".....was stride back then. They look the same to the uninformed but are very much different.

Counter rotation or inward turn is now scap load. Not just a new term but a better explanation of what is going on.

Stance then is posture now.

Batspeed then is bat quickness now.

Each of these contain more information than the original term. Each better explains reality.

This applies to today's hitters also. When the new terms were coined they all were already advanced players. Far into their own trial and error process.

That's why you don't hear Gwynn, Bonds, Pujols etc use the terms. They learned the old fashioned way. They didn't have their trial and error process shortened by a coach using these new terms.

However, give it a few years. Let todays youngsters growing up on these terms get old enough and see how they describe their swings.

As far as in what order did the greats learn their swings. They all suffered through the trial and error of more batspeed = less quickness. More quickness = less batspeed. I need quickness but my speed suffers. I have great speed but I don't have reaction time. Back and forth. Forth and back. Until it all came together.

IMHO there is no substitute for swing quickness. Swing quickness will get you playing time when you're young. Play defense and get hits = playing time for youngsters.

Now, learn to add some batspeed to send those hits further.

Compare that to the batspeed kid. Hits a long fly now and again and doesn't catch up on many others. Constantly swinging at bat pitches. Doesn't have the reaction time needed because his swing takes too long to execute. His long flys better be real long and pretty often to make up for his low OBP. And, unless he "trades off" batspeed for swing quickness his days are numbered.

Learn quickness first then learn speed.
Last edited by Linear
I have enjoyed these posts alot. I have been teaching hitting for 30 years and some of these technical terms are amazing. There are a lot of new fancy terms out there for those that need them. The approach is still the same if you truly no what you are teaching. The arms only follow the hands, if they react too soon, you will have a wrap hitter. CoachB25 not only knows his stuff, he has a proven track record. Believe me that they knew hitting in the 30's and 40's, they just knew they didn't need fancy terms, that while hitting can be broken down and explained, it ain't brain surgery. Many players I've worked with have gone on to great success and have always told me that they appreciated my approach of breaking it down and explaining it so that they could understand it and also teach it. Opinions are great though as we can always learn something new.

Merry Christmas to all
Coachric
Bluedog

Thanx and happy holidays to you to--- You know what---you know nothing about me so dont go where fools may fail

Both you and Linear post words but no backup-- you guys are a sham--kissing up to the claymation man--dolls dont so it--people do it and baseball is and will be forever one on one --not vacant words
No they are two totally separate things.

One is "how long it takes you to get from A to B".

The other is "how fast are you going when you get to B".

How long does it take you to get up to speed?

One gets his bat moving 85mph in .6 seconds.

Another gets his bat moving 85mph in .4 seconds.

Yet another may get his bat moving 80mph in .3 seconds.

In watching video you can see players that have an extra frame or two of video from launch to contact. Well, at 30 frames per second, a player that has 2 extra frames (2/30)is 1/15 of a second slower than the other guy. Yet both may reach the same batspeed.

When a hitter has .4 seconds to not only swing but to decide whether to swing or not, 1/15 of a second is huge.
Last edited by Linear
linear,
1]i appreciate your knowledge of hitting,although i disagree with some of your
points[that does not make you wrong,just my
opinion].
2]your point about t.r.was well taken.also,about
the other websters taking his part.i have read the h.s.web for a few years and they consistantly go after posters as a group.i don't
post very often because of this.
3]let me make it real interesting[i'm sure the
gang will jump on this]you said t.r.should stick
to the recruiting topics.why?he knowws nothing
about that either.

i don't know linear from adam,i'm just making an observation,i don't feel you have done anything wrong in your posts and feel you've contributed some good points about hitting.
i would debate it with you any time.

thank you
quote:
Originally posted by SoutherNo1:...how do you increase the top speed?...


Top speed comes from a combination of better mechanics, and better strength and conditioning.

You have to learn quickness first and then learn to develop speed within the frame work that allows your best quickness.

A major mistake 95% of all coaches make is searching for batspeed improperly. They search for the fastest bat at the expense of quickness. And, they look good for a while. Whether that is the youth league for many or the high school level for some. They help a kid reach top batspeed numbers and in so doing make him a worse hitter.

Because, at the level where your athletic ability is higher than your opponents, any mechanics will do as long as the bat is fast.

But, at such time that your athletic ability is no better than everyone else's, IF your mechanics are poor, you're doomed. Retirment time.

I've heard numerous posters say "you don't mess with someone who's hitting". Well, you're enabling his failure IF you know something about his future and don't tell him and don't ask him to (make him) work on it. And, this is 95% of all amateur baseball.

Because, most coaches aren't in it for player development. They love trophies. Their egos are really what they are about. They can't take a chance on "helping" a kid (which may mean 2 steps back before taking 1 step forward) because that will hurt their chances in league or districts or whatever.

Learn the mechanics of the quick swing at whatever batspeed you can generate. Even if its considerably less than in your old swing. Then, within those mechanics, train your body to generate more speed through strength and conditioning drills that "resemble" the swing movements.
Last edited by Linear
Southern writes
"Is this where the arms, and hands add to it?

Arm and hand action is about a pattern of movement that can affect the loading of the shoulders.

In regards to bat speed the arm and hand action is discussed in reference to a negative move...how to get the hands back and on an inside /out path through properly loading the shoulder unit.

This "arm and hand action" is not used considering or discussing the true swing after launch as a rule

The eternal debate is whether this arm and hand action is equal to a more simple backwards move. It envolves the players conscience ability to move his hands back and stay loaded until toe touch vs. putting the bat in a location that he MUST move his shoulders back in order to hit putting it on auto-pilot.

If the hands start in and to then the brain knows they must go back and away. It is a similar pattern that you see at "hand break" pitching from the stretch. This move gets overlapped by the hips rotating and turning toward the target and torque is created in the midsection. (again similar to pitching)

The debates goes to an argument that having the hands move in the simplest pattern( almost preloaded) is QUICKER( an still fast enough) vs a dynamic path the increases nuero stretch factors that yield more bat speed
( which it does by the way). Opponents say a fast bat that misses the ball is useless.

There are hand path issues and timing issues too, so it will never be solved. Your only benefit derived is that with study and consideration you will likely pick up some points of interest and learn a few things of value.

You will endure a few battles along the way but welcome just the same
Last edited by swingbuster
Many of today’s hitters are better because of better technique employed. If you or your hitters are not taking advantage of better techniques today or are resisting change, than you are missing the boat. The problem is that many of the improvements are subtle and most are not obvious enough to be understood by many.

If you disagree with the above, than I ask you to explain why baseball is so much different than say, basketball. Would anyone disagree that basketball has seen much change? Could you imagine seeing a player shoot like they used to with two hand push shots or many other old time basketball dribbling techniques?

I guess that is why some of us get a little frustrated with the many so called baseball people who we think would know better. We can’t understand why they still teach hitters the baseball equivalent of the two handed push shot.
I would like to go back to the original question " How will you teach hitting?"

very simple-- one on one-- no gimmicks, no gadgets-- one on one explaining and showing to the player ( regardless of age) what he is doing wrong

Keep in mind that each player is unique unto himself so "cookie cutter" methods will not and do not work across the board

Sometimes we try to get too darn scientific-- baseball is a game of "feel and reaction" not physics and cyber talk--there is no way a .200 hitter becomes a .300 hitter--he just ain't got it physically and mentally
I agree with TR that baseball gets too scientific, but I also think that it gets too generic. I always hear "see the ball, hit the ball" then someone else says "make sure you're right knee is perpendicular to the alignement of the shoulders". I don't think neither of those helps. I think the specificty lie in the middle somewhere. Some players need more specific instruction, some need more general instruction.
Last edited by Mr3000
quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
I would like to go back to the original question " How will you teach hitting?"

very simple-- one on one-- no gimmicks, no gadgets-- one on one explaining and showing to the player ( regardless of age) what he is doing wrong.


TR really thinks he's making a point when he says this. I think it's approaching 50-60 times he's posted this gem.

Of course, while we're posting this stuff it's the equivalent of a bunch of coaches sitting around a table discussing fundamentals. None of us, at the moment of the discussion is teaching. Yet, we all (at least most of us) do teach. And we teach one on one just like anyone teaching hitting.

It's the best he can come up with I guess. Satisfies his need to type.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:

A major mistake 95% of all coaches make is searching for batspeed improperly. They search for the fastest bat at the expense of quickness. And, they look good for a while. Whether that is the youth league for many or the high school level for some. They help a kid reach top batspeed numbers and in so doing make him a worse hitter.

Because, at the level where your athletic ability is higher than your opponents, any mechanics will do as long as the bat is fast.

But, at such time that your athletic ability is no better than everyone else's, IF your mechanics are poor, you're doomed. Retirment time.

I've heard numerous posters say "you don't mess with someone who's hitting". Well, you're enabling his failure IF you know something about his future and don't tell him and don't ask him to (make him) work on it. And, this is 95% of all amateur baseball.

Because, most coaches aren't in it for player development. They love trophies. Their egos are really what they are about. They can't take a chance on "helping" a kid (which may mean 2 steps back before taking 1 step forward) because that will hurt their chances in league or districts or whatever.



Linear,

I read this - and as always - test the intent of the message to the reality.

The reality I see here in this part of the country is exactly the opposite of what you describe.

95% of the coaches I have seen here at the high school/travel team and college level do a great job of developing players - and it is their main intent.

That is what confuses me so much about your posts - you can be so technically articulate about hitting - and then you drop off the cliff with nonsense about coaches you know nothing about - have never met - and have never watched.

Its like cooking a really good meal - and then pouring motor oil on it right before you serve it up.

Wink
Linear

The question is "How will you teach hitting?"

I answered--I truly apologize that I do not know as much as you think you know--

You do it your way and I will do it mine--I think I will be successful--you are the who knows it all-- but nobody knows anything about you other than you try to make everyone think you are the only one who is ever right.

One other thing--at least I do it my way,not the way I have been brainwashed to do it such as you are-- be original for once and always realize that every kid is different--no one way works for all of them
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
I can't help the fact that you don't understand the message. But since you don't, you won't reach the same conclusion.


On the contrary, I understand the message. Actually messages - plural.

The "hitting stuff" - although not new or revolutionary - is well articulated and, at times, interesting to read.

The "coaching stuff" makes virtually no sense and is in direct contrast to what I see just about every day.

I truly believe that the marketing approach you use to disseminate information is very poor.

Just my opinion.
Wink
quote:


The "hitting stuff" - although not new or revolutionary - is well articulated and, at times, interesting to read.


Trust me.......You don't get it. Your response would be different if you did.


quote:
I truly believe that the marketing approach you use to disseminate information is very poor...


I'm not selling anything. Don't care if anyone "buys".

But what I describe is the truth.

The proof is in the numbers. Millians of kids begin at say age 5 or 6. By the time they are 24 less than 100 are playing mlb.

Coaches line up to coach little league, babe ruth league, legion ball, high school etc etc. Add up all the teams all over the country and they can't get more than 100 to play mlb at age 24??? Now that's a bad track record.

And you expect me to believe you and the others "get it".

You're sadly mistaken.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Coaches line up to coach little league, babe ruth league, legion ball, high school etc etc. Add up all the teams all over the country and they can't get more than 100 to play mlb at age 24??? Now that's a bad track record.


Linear,
How can teaching something at the little league level change the number of roster spots at the MLB level?
Don't mind him folks, the little white van with the nice little sirens the cool jacket with the long arms will be stopping by his house in the morning. Big Grin

de·lu·sion ( P ) Pronunciation Key (d-lzhn)
n.

A false belief or opinion: labored under the delusion that success was at hand.
In Psychiatry- A false belief strongly held in spite of invalidating evidence, especially as a symptom of mental illness: delusions of persecution.

Why did you quit coaching? It appears you could have become THE most prolific coach in the history of the amatuer ranks, I mean with sending ALL your students to the show and all. What a shame you gave up on the game.

What kind of establishment doesn't serve chicken tenders?
Linear,

Actually - I dont believe you get "it".

And yes - you are selling your ideas.
Or at least attempting to do so.
You may not think you are - but you are.
Poorly - I might add.

As for talent in this country - it just seems to be getting better and better - every year - at all ages. I am surprised you have not noticed this. Someone is doing something right. Actually - alot of things right. Perhaps a trip to the field - and out of the lab - may help.

As for Fungo's comment - I agree 100%.

What does the number of roster spots in MLB have to do with youth training?
quote:
Originally posted by Mr3000:
I agree with TR that baseball gets too scientific, but I also think that it gets too generic. I always hear "see the ball, hit the ball" then someone else says "make sure you're right knee is perpendicular to the alignement of the shoulders". I don't think neither of those helps. I think the specificty lie in the middle somewhere. Some players need more specific instruction, some need more general instruction.


The above quote is what Mr. 3000 wrote regarding hitting and how he agreed with TR about some coaches trying to be to scientific and others trying to be to generic.

quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
quote:
..I don't think neither of those helps.


I agree.


The quote above is how Linear replied.


Now, I have placed the actually thought that Linear is refering to in Mr. 3000 message in bold. Now a real coach would have explained why they agree with the statement in question. What they would be focusing on and How they would go about teaching it different and what they would be looking for. However, Linear just gives a one liner about how he agrees but offers no explanation.

Scooter
Last edited by Scooter
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
quote:
...Now, I have placed the actually thought...


No, you didn't "get" the first jab and I doubt if you "get" this one.



Cool, try harder with your insult buddy. You are just back stepping now since you have been put on the spot. Oh by the way, try and remove your self from a certain person's back side and maybe you will comprehend what I am getting at with my post.

Oh yeah, Why do we drive on a parkway and park in a driveway?
Scooter
Last edited by Scooter
Fungo

I said...."How many criminals started in jail"?

Of course, it won't make your point so you change it to "How many people in jail started out as criminals".

Sorry, I'm not buying your *** backwards logic.

For "followers" I don't recommend you drink the Kool Aid.

The point I'm making is the vast majority of players that make it, can not point to anything but their own trial and error process that got them there. What got them there was learned on their own, and with most cases their dad. Again, vast majority.

So much a vast majority, that not only can most players not point to a coach who made the difference in their understanding of "how to get the barrel there quicker" but most coaches, in fact, were obstacles themselves in the learning process. Not facilitators. Not teachers. But, obstacles.

The things most coaches provide is opportunities to play. Which is very valuable. What they don't provide because they refuse to study is "skill" knowledge, in particular "hitting skill knowledge". But they really like the accolades when they live in a community that have kids who work there butts off, trial and error, with dad, and then play at their school. Now, they like to say "look at me!! Look what "I" can do." ""I" can put him in the 1 hole, him in the 2 hole, him in the 3 hole etc, he can pitch, he can field and....oh my god....look what "I" can do." Right B25? Well, only about 95 out of a 100 can look at 20 players and pick the best 9.....What really are you doing?

What good is it if someone provides an opportunity while at the same time unknowingly placing obstacles to one's success. And, it's these obstacles that cause the "baseball track record" to be so bad. Plain and simple, bad coaching. About 40% of major leaguers are from other countries even though we have all the wealth, facilities, etc etc. If there was any decent rate of good knowledge dissimination that figure would be much lower.

It's

Ever have an original thought? You remind me of the "hit me" guy in One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest.

Long and the short of it is you "lineup card maker outers" that call yourselves coaches, have no clue what is involved in a high level swing. Not only have no clue, but want no clue. Which is the worse sin a coach can commit.

But you do like trophies.....right B25?

Isn't it about time for your self strokes?
Last edited by Linear
FWIW ..the latest info on hitting which I find most desciptive has been evolving for 3-4 years. Now I know baseball has been around for a while but many people are not up on the latest stuff. I will let you guys argue whether it is good or bad.


The group that could use a brushing up can include anybody. A childhood friend of mine just stopped by and we talked hitting. He was interested in the new methods of teaching rotational hitting as he still dabbles in it. He pitched for the Twins in a World Series, played for Atlanta and several other organizations.

My forays into camp settings does reveal some mind numbing approaches to the swing that have kids looking for clover. If I had found that those presentations had the answers then I would have stopped searching and none of you guys would be here either
Last edited by swingbuster
quote:
The point I'm making is the vast majority of players that make it, can not point to anything but their own trial and error process that got them there. What got them there was learned on their own, and with most cases their dad. Again, vast majority.


Let me get this straight players have reached their goals by their own trial and error and not by no coach's helping hand. Well, I guess that puts you into the same category as the rest of us. Because if the vast number of players reach these goals without our help, then the vast number you have coached have reached their goals without your help. So basically, your belief and coaching ability is no better than the rest of ours especially if players reach their goals without any help except for dad.

quote:
The things most coaches provide is opportunities to play. Which is very valuable. What they don't provide because they refuse to study is "skill" knowledge, in particular "hitting skill knowledge". But they really like the accolades when they live in a community that have kids who work there butts off, trial and error, with dad, and then play at their school. Now, they like to say "look at me!! Look what "I" can do." ""I" can put him in the 1 hole, him in the 2 hole, him in the 3 hole etc, he can pitch, he can field and....oh my god....look what "I" can do." Right B25? Well, only about 95 out of a 100 can look at 20 players and pick the best 9.....What really are you doing?


Please dont paint the kettle black, cause you stated in a post the other day that only good players can comprehend what you teach. So basically, you are syaing you only take advanced players that already have a good foundation and tweak it here and there and then proclaim you are an expert, which is no different then what you just stated. Anyone can do that with a little reading about Epstein's system. So what are you really doing?

quote:
And, it's these obstacles that cause the "baseball track record" to be so bad. Plain and simple, bad coaching.


Maybe, it is just because kids here in the United States have more to choose from than the other countries. I am sorry that you are angry at the system of coaching because you weren't given a shot to go further. I was blacked-balled by my high school coach cause I wasn't a good ole boy but I admire all coaches and teachers because they are the back bone of our future leaders along with some good parental support and love.

quote:
Ever have an original thought? You remind me of the "hit me" guy in One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest.


Have you ever had an orginial thought yourself?


You are always blasting on Coach Butler and I think it is jealousy. Why? because he is successful at getting players to the next level and you just take advanced players and tweak their mechanics and they give you no accolades for their progress. You may not won't them to tell you thank you and you may say you don't do it for that but deep inside everyone wants the acknowledgement of helping others reach their goals

Scooter
quote:
...It would be nice to have great pitching coaches and great hitting coaches all over the country, but it won't make much of a difference...


Disagree. The number of "close but" players who don't make it now, could make it with a solid "upbringing". How many of them are there?

Why do they have to spend that kind of money on showcases, tournaments etc? Because the system is set up for coaches to win trophies and say "look what I've done". Put all the best on one team so we can win. Now, lets travel all over the country for tournaments. Player development is of no interest to 95% of them. "Pick em clean quick". They use you until they have a better replacement. Then they kick you to the curb. Let's win win win.

"Coaches" don't teach. They are trophy happy.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by bbscout:

The African American kids have been left out of the game in just a short period of time, because baseball in America has become an upper middle to upper class game. When you spend $7,000-$20,000 every summer on showcases and travel teams, where do you think the African American inner city kid ends up? He ends up in a basketball or football uniform. So does the lower income level white kid. If you can't afford to showcase and travel team, your chances of a scholarship diminish, because all the college coaches go to showcases and follow big time travel teams.

S>O>C>C>ER is the problem.


Bingo!

Great post. IMO.
I wish it were as easy as blaming the S game. As Doug pointed out, the S game is merely catering to what our kids and the parents seem to want: an easy victory with lots of praise to go around.

I've always liked a quote I read somewhere, made by a high school teacher: "Football may be the best subject taught in high school because it's the only subject we haven't tried to make easy."
Kids aren't stupid. When they receive what is perceived by them to be "good coaching" and they still fail, they move on.

If they had the "real deal" (coaching) and had the success they all deserve, they wouldn't leave the game as quickly.

But, who is in charge of youth baseball through high school in the USA.........Your neighbors and mine. Volunteers. 99% with no clue.

Holy Cow. Well-meaning but clueless people.

So, dads do what? Go to the local training center to find a teacher for the son. What do they find? Ex pros who could but can't. They played but can't begin to tell you what they did right. And the cycle continues every year.

Those who finally make it do so from stubborn trial and error. They have to ignore coaching to make it. Some can deal with that. Some can't.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Player development is of no interest to 95% of them.
So basically teams just put an ad in the paper for a non-paying coaching position and the first person who phones gets the job, even if it was my grandma?

It seems to me, Linear, that it is YOU who seems to be trying to gain a ton of praise and recognition on here by challenging everyone's coaching beliefs and opinions, and even deny facts that BBScout has posted. Usually when someone posts stats based on populations there has been a background study. Those stats are facts, it's awfully hard to deny a fact: a fact being a proven statement. I think denying the facts and continually trying to be always right just shows alot about your character.
quote:
Originally posted by Mr3000:
...and even deny facts that BBScout has posted.


Don't get me wrong, I like bbscout. Can always have an educated discussion/debate with him. But, I must say, his facts are no different than anyone elses in my book.

quote:
...Usually when someone posts stats based on populations there has been a background study. Those stats are facts, it's awfully hard to deny a fact: a fact being a proven statement. I think denying the facts and continually trying to be always right just shows alot about your character.


I believe the facts bbscout posted had to do with upper, middle and lower class americans. And why they don't chose baseball. That is quite different from my point about why millions start and less than 100 get to the mlb level.
Last edited by Linear
So why don't you take the first move to change that?

Become a volanteer youth coach, you can do it, I challange you. Give back to the game that ripped your dark heart out.

Why did you "quit" coaching to begin with?

I am reminded of Uncle Rico from Napolean Dynamite

Rico: "How much you want to make a bet I can throw a football over them mountains? Yeah. If coach would've put me in fourth quarter... we'd have been state champions, no doubt. No doubt in my mind. You better believe things would have been different. I'd have gone pro...in a heartbeat. I'd be makin' millions of dollars and... livin' in a... big ol' mansion somewhere. You know, soakin' it up in a hot tub with my soul mate. Kip, I reckon you know a lot about cyberspace. Y-You ever come across anything like time travel?"

Sound familiar Richard? Rico.... hey how about that for a coincidence.
Last edited by Glove Man
And...............coaches do win trophies at showcases. The trophy is invisible but now the "standing" in their little world is priceless. Really pumps the ego.

"Well, so and so (his player) did this or did that at the showcase. Play for me and you could have similar results."

Now he takes that information, recruits him the best team out of his are and turns it into trophies.

Look what I did for so and so. When in reality, all he did was recruit so and so and make out the lineup card..
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by bbscout:
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
Kids aren't stupid. When they receive what is perceived by them to be "good coaching" and they still fail, they move on.

If they had the "real deal" (coaching) and had the success they all deserve, they wouldn't leave the game as quickly.

But, who is in charge of youth baseball through high school in the USA.........Your neighbors and mine. Volunteers. 99% with no clue.

Holy Cow. Well-meaning but clueless people.

So, dads do what? Go to the local training center to find a teacher for the son. What do they find? Ex pros who could but can't. They played but can't begin to tell you what they did right. And the cycle continues every year.

Those who finally make it do so from stubborn trial and error. They have to ignore coaching to make it. Some can deal with that. Some can't.


If that is the case, then who is teaching the Dominicans? The poor American kids can't afford an ex-pro coach, so in your thinking, they should then be better off, but they arn't, and they are dropping out of baseball.


NO ONE TEACHES THE DOMINICANS. They just play ball all day every day. It's their only chance. And a much higher percentage of Dominicans make it than Americans.

Why? Less coaching obstacles in the Domincan.
For all concerned I would like to keep on topic.

My concern is not how many African Amercians play baseball. I could care less what they do.

My only concern and all I care to discuss is the poor coaching that leads to millions of American kids falling short of their baseball potential.

Regardless of their color.

There is no question there are tons of options for all kids to chose from.

Let's talk about the ones who chose baseball and don't reach their goals. Why?

The "skill coaching" is horrendous. In fact, 90% is obstruction. Stands in the way of a hitters progress.
Last edited by Linear
Scout

Of all the people on this board, you are one of the few that I believe understand and do things for the right reasons.

Now, that being said, are you just so tired of me that you'll deny that the vast majority of all travel teams are not interested in player development? That the leader of the vast majority of those organizations couldn't begin to instruct a hitter on his skill? Or a pitcher on his skills?
OK. We agree. No skill coaching at "older" travel ball level?

Same at the younger level travel levels.

Same at the youth level. Volunteers coaches most with no background.

Same at the high school level. We know the qualifications for a high school coach.

Same at the beginning level. Well-meaning volunteers that have little or no background.

Now, where is all this good coaching everyone believes exists?

So, how do they learn. They stumble onto it themselves by trial and error and repetition.

What if there was good coaching. Hell, at this point I'd settle for non-obstructive coaching. Just stay out of a players way.
Last edited by Linear
Linear

So as to enlighten you in a field you that have no idea about:

SHOWCASES--there are no trophies and I know no coach who thinks as you do where a showcase is concerned--the coaches are there to showcase the kids not recruit

TRAVEL TEAMS--the key here is to refine the skills of the kids who are all fine players to begin with or they wouldn't be there--I am with bbscout here-- a travel team plays the best competition they can so as to get the players ready for the next level.Do the coaches coach and instruct? YES-- but in a different manner than you are aware of now or will ever be aware of

You know what Linear--you spout a lot of stuff but we know nothing about you-- good bad or indifferent I wear my heart on my sleeve, bbscout is who he is and many others are not afraid to be known--good, bad or indifferent I know I am proud of and know who and what I am.

I cant speak for others but I am sure they are as comfortable as well otherwise they would not open up.

Can you say the same ?

You seem frustrated in trying to impress everyone with how much you think you know.

But then I know what site to go to read what you say and with the same attitude as you as well


DUH !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Would love to. Riddle me this. How many youth coaches do you know that will want to be told they know nothing? Even, if I can prove it.

I will guarantee you this though. If I live long enough. My grandsons/granddaughters will be on one of the best hitting teams ever to play the game at the level I get to coach them. Give me them when they begin. Then "test" them 3 years later.
Last edited by Linear
not talking college here Richard, we're talking youth ball, ages 10 to 18. Will you do it?

I want to pick up the ST Louis Post Dispatch and read where a local bar owner has given his precious time and vast knowledge to the local baseball teams.... for free. i'll put out the press release if you do it. Imagine the free pub you could get for your pool hall. it's a win-win opportunity!
Linear

you have not proved you know anything here so why should we suspect you can prove it to youth coaches

one other thing-- why not name the poster you are directing your statements to--it would help--but then you cannot do that can you because you cannot get to the point other than say you are the only correct one--wanna dance ?--name the tune

Postscript-- dont go near the 'riddle me" this thing--you aint THE RIDDLER---
Last edited by TRhit
quote:
Originally posted by TRHit:
How can I answer you if I know what site you speak?


quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
...But then I know what site to go to read what you say and with the same attitude as you as well...


If you can't keep a line of thought longer than 20 minutes I'm going to have to call you "ALZ MAN".
Last edited by Linear
...and now back to the topic. Swingbuster, your question is intriguing. Remember when Lau was the rage? He had a lot of success. Then others came in and changed a portion of that theory, created new terms and they were the rage. Why? IT SELLS!!! That as simple as I can say it! No I don't agree with all that Charlie Lau taught. I do respect the man and his accomplishments. So, what do you do? This isn't really about Linear/Teacherman/Ozzir/Rshard/... it's really about finding that style that you're convinced is correct then testing that to see if it really is what you believe. Then, it is defining that to your team or program. You have to do that by including those drills that you value and discarding those that you don't. Now, you test that and discussing hitting with others who's values you respect. Believe me, you will then find some flaws in what you knew to be the truth. Refine those some more and then teach what you know. Once you have done all of this, tell yourself that you will always be the student and not the expert but you impart your knowledge on your players. We can have a 1,000 opinions on who's right and wrong here. However, the proof is in the success of those kids you coach and the knowledge that you did your best!
Last edited by CoachB25
Linear,

As I told you before. "Shock and Awe" marketing is a bad idea. Wink

Just state your opinions about how you teach hitting. That may have value. We know you have no credentials whatsoever - but you articulate well IMO. - And that may have value.

The rest of your stuff about youth coaching is utter nonsense. You need to travel a bit - get on the road for 100 days or so - go to the facilities - watch the coaching - and experience the real deal.

I know that isnt original - but You know what I know. The original marketing concept is failing - miserably.

LOL

Wink
Last edited by itsinthegame
B25,

As a coach you must create a hitting system at your school that works. You find the absolutes and go with them.

I believe that Englishbey's

Posture, connect, rotate is efficient. It can be the similar to nostride, bat in 45 slot, drop and tilt...although they would say not exactly but as far as player understanding pretty close.

The connect portion ...I take to mean the bottom hand lead shoulder connects to the turn quickly helps get the barrel out in the zone with force.

To best do that...IMO...the details.....

the lead elbow is down close to the body ( maybe what you mean with the towel drill) as the stride or shift begins.

If the top hand is pronated ( palm over/ bat cocked) then the rear elbow elevates and internally rotates to get in the proper position inside the target line.

then...

Rear elbow action is up(top palm angles down) then elbow internally rotates then slots/ external rotation/ top palm up.

A slight plane change from at least splitting helmet to 45 launch aids this rear elbow action and makes loading work well.

It insures the fact that the hands will come out knob to oppo box and the barrel will get out there from flail.

The lead elbow starts close to pect then as the bat flattens it goes into the plane of the pitch.
quote:
My concern is not how many African Amercians play baseball. I could care less what they do.


So basically, you believe in discrimination towards other of a different race and only coaching the gifted athletes who can learn something one way.

quote:
For all concerned I would like to keep on topic.


It is on topic and BBscout has kept it on topic. You are the one who is back tracking and trying to hide your tail under your legs cause you've been put on the spot and don't have an answer. Correct me if I am wrong but didn't you say
quote:
The point I'm making is the vast majority of players that make it, can not point to anything but their own trial and error process that got them there. What got them there was learned on their own, and with most cases their dad. Again, vast majority.
BBscout asked you or stated that if this is true then why aren't more African Americans playing baseball because in the inner city they learn the game by their on trial and error.

quote:
Let's talk about the ones who chose baseball and don't reach their goals. Why?


Maybe, they decided they didn't want to play anymore because of the work needed to get better, decided to get a job, wanted more time to spend with their friends, and etc... It could be many reasons instead of your simple minded answer reagarding the lack of coaching. I think the real truth is a dream didn't happen for someone you know and now instead of blaming them or yourself, you just decide to blame the coaching rank ...Grandpa.

quote:
out of his are


Before criticizing others for improper language usage, learn to spell the simple words such as area. And you say you used to be a teacher, hmmm no wonder you quit, I would have to with your horrendous spelling.
quote:
player development


I don't think you are to worried about player development with some of your simple minded answers and replies. I think you paint the kettle black and are trying to be something you are not because you are no different then anyone here just a better liar and con. Because if you were as worried about the quality of coaching in the U.S., you would be volunteering your time to make sure kids are given a chance to learn the skill of hitting but you hide and reply with wait until my grandkids start playing. You are a fraud who is looking for a pat on the back for something you didn't even come up with on your own...


Scooter
Last edited by Scooter
I do believe, in fact I know, that Linear's hitting beliefs are genuine and grounded in truth and fact.....He does have an exemplary understanding of how to get the bat around to the ball in the most efficient manner presently known......And, this is because of the willingness of a certain person to share his knowledge, whose name can't be mentioned on this website.....

Problem is, you can't just tell baseball Coaches, or players, to forget everything they ever learned about swinging a bat.....They have to feel an efficient (high level) swing in their bones to understand what Linear is saying.....Until this happens, the understanding part won't happen.....
Linear,

I know you can teach hitting. I have no doubt

My son graduated too. He had a good Senior Year but loved other parts of life more than baseball. To play beyond HS is a great commitment starting about your soph year and lasting until 22.

I was asked to teach our HS hitters by the Head Master and Head Coach. I have done it before but backed off as my son entered his HS playing time.

I am more interested in the individual instruction. There are kids that need help and want help. Whether we produce college level players or beyond is not the point. That would be a math equation dealing with the pool of kids you had at your disposal coupled with coaching talent too.

I love teaching and hang out here to get my fix until practice begins. I have refocused my objectives and learned some good cues in the last couple of weeks.

I miss my son badly but I want back on the horse. I see my baseball kids past and present all over town and I love those connections
Bluedog and Swingbuster,

I understand your points about Linear. My problem is with the fact that he always critizes but never offers explanations of why he believes his system is right. It is just we are wrong and he is right. How hard would it be for him to come on here and state his system step for step and then let us other coaches decide if we want to use it or not. Swingbuster doesn't come on here and belittle people for disagreeing with his system.


Scooter
Last edited by Scooter
I am afraid Ny**** taught some good mechanics but set a bad example for human tolerance. NY*** nomes do insist that people get their facts straight or be prepared to be challenged. They have produced some good info and observations that make sense and have helped me. They need to study the upper body physics more objectively as there is room to better describe it. They tend to get things right when they decide they exist. Need to spend more time promoting and distributing good info and less about who gets the credit
quote:
Originally posted by Scooter:
... never offers explanations of why he believes his system is right.


My explanations are all over this website.

Just because you don't understand them OR are too fricking lazy to search for them doesn't mean they don't exist.

EXAMPLE: In this very thread the discussion on moving your center to create momentum and the loading/unloading of your center is good stuff. However, you don't recognize it. Why? Because it's over your head at this time.

It's like asking a 4th grader to factor a binomial (algebra). Yet, they are just now learning their multiplication table.

Your problem is you don't know enough to understand what is right in front of you.

When you get an education you'll understand.

Start your study process now. Soon, you'll get it.

Until then stop embarassing yourself.

BTW, you aren't alone.
Last edited by Linear
Linear,
I’ll make you a deal. (Pending approval by the site administrator) If you will document (and post) all aspects of what you believe to be the proper methods of hitting without the barbs and accusation toward others, I will lock that post and allow it to be part of the HSBBW. Like most people on the HSBBW I am unaware of your total philosophy of hitting. Sure I’ve read snippets in between verbal exchanges, but what I’m suggesting would be your contribution and yours alone. What do you say?
Thanks,
Fungo
DISCLAIMER: I am not involved financially in any way shape or form with S E T P R O. In fact, I was banned from their site in mid December.

I have been on a lifelong quest to get to the bottom of what it takes to be a hitter.

I have never claimed this stuff to be "mine". I'm just a motivated student. Motivated enough to spend upwards of 20 hours per week studying and teaching for the last 5 years. I've done the trial and error thing. I've got almost every video or book on hitting. I've bought every gadget that I thought was interesting. BTW, most are junk. Get a T and a net and a video camera and start swinging.

The trial and error thing involves thousands of hours. If you'd like to reduce your trial and error period, listen to what is being taught at S E T P R O .com.

Just create a permanent link to S E T P R O .com or hitting-mechanics.org.
No need for a locked thread of mine. This isn't my stuff. It's all documented on their site(s).

If the hsbaseballweb was interested in promoting the best baseball information available, they'd give S E T P R O their endorsement.

Before TR and all the other 1st rungers say "who has he developed". Consider he's only been around for 5 years or so. That the majority of players he gets are "on their last leg". They have engrained mechanics that require thousands of hours to change.....most unwilling to make the changes because they have to go back before they can go forward....and their current level of competition can not deal with that. They won't play if they can't produce.

However, they are working with a significant number of youngsters. In 5-10 years the S E T P R O impact will be felt.
Last edited by Linear
Linear,

I am not embarassing myself cause I am not the one going around saying they are GOD. I do understand what you are talking about and it has been around for a long time, the only difference is it is stated in different terms.

Example, you talk about loading and unloading your center...to me that means going back before you can go forward. Basically, loading your body to guarantee proper rotational force from the ground up which will give you more power and bat quickness. In other words, coil up like a snake and explode.


Now, I dont need all the technical mumbo-jumbo you have to use to get the message across.

By the way moron, stop embarassing yourself by back-peddling over issues that you are afraid to answer and quit using statements that I can go read on a website.. Put your system in your own words.


Scooter
quote:
Originally posted by Scooter:
Linear,

I am not embarassing myself


As I just wrote, this post is extremely embarassing to you. You just don't know it.

quote:
Example, you talk about loading and unloading your center...to me that means going back before you can go forward.


Oh my God! That is so far from the truth that at your present level of understanding you wouldn't understand the truth.

quote:
Basically, loading your body to guarantee proper rotational force from the ground up


Oh my God! The swing is NOT a ground up movement.

quote:
I dont need all the technical mumbo-jumbo you have to use to get the message across.


Yes you do.

quote:
..quit using statements that I can go read on a website..


Why? That's where I got it. Show me where I claimed ownership to this information.

quote:
Put your system in your own words.


Again, I don't own a system. I am a follower of the one guy who has advanced hitting understanding to new heights.
Last edited by Linear
And that one guy, may not have all the answers.


quote:
Oh my God! The swing is NOT a ground up movement.


So you are saying that you can stand flat footed and hit the ball 400 feet with just your arms. That is interesting, I didnt know that.

I will tell you what, lets play a game... you can ask me questions about hitting and I will do the same... I will give you my explanation of your questions and you give me your explanations of my questions.

Scooter
Last edited by Scooter
Teacherman's hitting belief is based on how great hitters properly move the middle of the body......Teaching something such as this is not done by being abstract and saying, do this and this, and you got it.....

Honestly, most on this website don't even know the power source of a MLB hitter's swing......And, that's just the beginning of understanding rotation with connection and the correct use of posture.....Anyone who has a sincere interest in learning this stuff can do what Teacherman and many others, including myself, have done.....Do the research and trial and error..... noidea
quote:
Originally posted by Scooter:
And that one guy, may not have all the answers


He will be the first to tell you he doesn't have all the answers.

He'll also be the first to tell you what is being taught by 95% is junk.

On the learning ladder of 25 rungs, he's on rung 20. I'm on rung 5. You're stepping onto the first rung.
quote:
Oh my God! The swing is NOT a ground up movement.


So basically, you are saying you don't have to use your legs... you can just swing flat footed. I thought we were talking hitting and not just one aspect of hitting.

Well, lets play a game, you ask me a question about hitting and if I get it wrong, you explain it to me with your technical bs.

Scooter
quote:
Originally posted by Linear:
No one spoon fed me.

And, I won't spoon feed you.

But, if you do what I did, in about 6 months you will have to say......You know, that Linear.....

Until then, let people who can carry on a decent debate, debate. Sit back and listen.



I like to listen to good debates but you dont have debates, you have blasting sessions with everyone. They cant have an opinion because when they do, it is wrong by your standards and then the blasting game starts with you instead of just saying how you would teach it, you just call them dumb and stupid. I dont follow one system, I try and learn from all systems. Oh yea, I am not a follower, I am a leader.... followers are just flunkies being used.


Scooter
Linear,

Seriously, which major league hitter best exemplifies your "swing" philosophies. I would be interested in seeing some video, to better understand you, rather than debate you.

In the past, you and I have traded barbs, but I'm willing to listen, if your willing to explain. It can be via email if you like, or you can tell me to go butt a stump.

Be good,
David
Last edited by leftydad
They all do.

Well, all the good ones.

There are really very few things they do differently.

They all swing from their center. They all load/unload in a similar fashion.

Most people are blinded by the what the hands and arms are doing and they totally miss the good stuff.

Check out their posture, their connection, the load/unload of their rotation.

Pay particular attention to their swing plane being perpendicular to their spine. Ask yourself, how do they do that on almost every swing at every pitch location.

It doesn't come from arm adjustment.

I love Bonds, Manny, Pujols. Olerud is a great example of how skill can overrule athletic ability. Ichiro loads/unloads like all of them. Arod looks different to the normal eye. But, check out his lower body.

I've got to go to work.

To be continued....
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by itsinthegame:
Linear,

Could you at least award me rung #2 - for mercy's sake?

Big Grin


In the spirit of the new year, I'll say your first foot is soundly planted on the first rung and your second foot is off the ground reaching for the next rung. Smile

But, I have to say, TR's ladder is still hanging in his garage.
Last edited by Linear
Put four infielders in a 4 corners situation and have them throw to their left. Make them catch the ball in the center of their chest and get rid of it as quickly as possible to the next player.

Have their hips coiling and tell them to have the sense that their cheats are in the air as they release it you will see that rotational torque is a top body / lower body function and it is not ground up. They will appear to be floating as they release. There was a time I thought it was ground up but it is not.
Last edited by swingbuster
Swingbuster,

Just adding a few thoughts.

The one thing I have never agreed with about Linear's approach is the lack of emphasis placed on hand/arm/wrist strength.

It does NOT have to be excluded from the hitting equation - and does not have to interfere with rotational technique IMO.

IMO - The stronger the hands/wrists/arms - the better off you will be.
no dispute of oleruds natural ability here. if you are in the majors that long you have some athletic ability. i was just trying to save some time and more arguments - linear had already stated what he meant by skill vs. athletic ability of olerud a few pages earlier on this thread. but some big leaguers do have to work harder on mastering technique than others. what that technique or theory is for you all to argue. im just interested in application at the high school level - not physics equations.
scout

I've read that Olerud is/was a slow runner. Good heady baserunner, but slow. I've also read that his batspeed is subpar for mlb players.

I deducted his athletic ability is less than most mlb players.

Athletic ability to me means, strength, speed, explosiveness.

If I'm wrong, set me straight.

I would say he's very high on the skill list. Very skilled both defensively and offensively. Great firstbaseman. Very good swing.

I deduct his skills took him much further than most with equivalent athletic ability.
Last edited by Linear
Swing,

When someone is throwing 90-95 mph moving fastballs - or mid 80's sliders at you - or even good changes - you are going to be fooled alot IMO.

If you dont have strong hands/wrists/arms - and good hand/eye coordination - you are in big trouble.

The only exception - unfortunately - is if you are swinging a $300 aluminum rocket launcher. If that is the case - you can be weak - be fooled and still get the ball out of the infield.

BTW - Happy New Year.
Last edited by itsinthegame
quote:
I'm just guessing but you may be able to debate Miranda rights.


In your case, I probably would but you wouldn't get what they mean so I would just give you a card that had them on there and let you take it to ***** and have him translate it for you since you can't do anything by yourself. Oh, I tried to go to the website of this guru in hitting but it isn't up and running..... hmmmm makes you wonder about the fraud issue.
Swingbuster, Itsinthegame, I think we all think very much alike when it comes to hitting. Linear wants to promote load ... All good and well. I agree to a large extent. Then he wants to exclude hands and arms. Easy for him, he doesn't have that product he has to produce in the end which is a successful program. Does a typical team get one or two athletes that would naturally do as Linear (...) wants regardless of whether you discuss hands? Sure! However, you have to put 6,7,8,& 9 out there. Getting them to be productive simpy isn't that easy. Top hand and bottom hand work has to be initiated to get them repetitions of what needs to be done to shorten their swings, have a better swing path and to understand simply getting the bat to the ball. Linear, since he constantly and consistently states that he doesn't (teach) anything regarding the hands then denies the benefits of these drills.

To get off subject but to put my 2 cents in on one other issue. I've had several communications with Bluedog. While he agrees with Linear consistently (as I often do), I firmly believe he is actually in the coaching profession. I think many dispute that. As we all know, you don't have to be in the coaching profession to know more about baseball than a coach but knowing and doing are two different things and when some one is actively doing then they see our arguments from a different perspective. JMHO!
Last edited by CoachB25
Linear,

Alot to me means frequently. (Please dont ask me to define that - LOL)

Some days are better than others - based on the quality of pitching you face.

When my boys initiate discussions with me about their at bats after a game - it is usually the first thing we talk about. What were they looking for - and what did they get. On good days - there arent many misses. On bad days - there are several (general example: 4 at bats - 20 pitches - and at least 5 toughies).

It is very similar to my own experience playing. I guess if you are a MLB player - you dont miss as frequently - but I wouldnt know that.
Linear,

Just adding to the athletic ability discussion.

When I talk about hand/eye coordination - I take that to mean the direction and quickness at which your hand/arms/shoulders anticipate and react to what you see.

In just about any sport I can think of - if this "coordination" isnt sharp - you probably will not last long - and in certain sports - you will most likely be carried off the field on a stretcher - regardless of how fast or strong you are.
Last edited by itsinthegame
quote:
Originally posted by bbscout:
Linear, When hanging with my pals, I get into arguments about "what is an athlete"? Most of my friends think it is running speed and jumping, so they go for some football players and most of the basketball players. I go for the best baseball players, that have to hit, run, throw, field and react to 95mph fastballs.

John Olerud has everything except running speed. He is a world class hitter, fielder and thrower. He has been the best since he was a boy.His last year at Washington State was the best season in the history of D1 baseball. He hit .464 with 21 home runs, but the amazing thing was that he went 15-0 on the mound too and was named college player of the year.He went from college, straight to the Major Leagues. They did not send him to the minor leagues which happens about once every 15 years.

I just feel that John Olerud has tremendous ability and is a great athlete.

On the other hand, I had the chance to watch one of the worlds greatest athletes play 3 baseball games in the Arizona Fall League about ten years ago and if you did not know before hand that it was Michael Jordan, you would never go to the game and say, "hey, the guy in LF sure is a good athlete". He threw like a girl and the only thing he did pretty well was run, and going down the line, he was 4.3 which is just average major league speed. To put it bluntly, he was very awkward and that is about the time I started changing my thoughts on what "athletic ability" was.


I don't disagree with anything you say except your conclusion.

It definately takes a "baseball guy" to define athletic ability like you do.

What Olerud has is great skills. And his skills have outrun his athletic ability. His athletic ability, while I'm sure greater than mine, is very average, probably less than average, when comparing him to professional athletes.

BTW, I've read it, I've heard others say it, I've said it. Is it true? Is his batspeed subpar for mlb players? Or do you know?

His bat quickness has to rank with the high ones though.
Last edited by Linear
quote:
Originally posted by CoachB25:
... Does a typical team get one or two athletes that would naturally do as Linear (...) wants regardless of whether you discuss hands? Sure! However, you have to put 6,7,8,& 9 out there. Getting them to be productive simpy isn't that easy. Top hand and bottom hand work has to be initiated to get them repetitions of what needs to be done to shorten their swings, have a better swing path and to understand simply getting the bat to the ball.


Not only do I deny the benefits of top hand and bottom hand drills, you are an obstructionist, IMHO, by taking those who will be your #6, #7, #8 and #9 hitters and teach them the "benefits of the hands".

What they need MORE than anyone is an understanding of the center, carrying it forward, loading and unloading. AND, it is much easier to teach with a much quicker "learn time" than any and all the hand drills you teach.

It is a fact, plain and simple, whether you or any other 1st rungers agree, that the only map to better swing quickness comes from the center. NOT THE HANDS. And better swing quickness is the "fix" for #6, #7, #8 and #9.

Go ahead, build your hand strength. I've never said strong hands don't help. I did say strong hands have nothing to do with the execution of a high level swing against high level pitching.
Last edited by Linear
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