I have the utmost of respect for everyone of you baseball veterans. You are all my heroes and I am honored that you would even address my "crate drill".
Cap'n, you're the most. A great teacher, instructor, player, etc. etc. Can't say enough about your contributions as well as Midlo Dad, BBScout, Bighit, Bobblehead, Texan, Hsballcoach, HOF1962, roger Thomas, deemack
, micdsguy, royals, SDbaseball, painguy, and plenty of others here. You are all my heroes and together we can achieve greatness in instruction of others! No doubt! I am convinced of that after reading all of your posts in the past years with high level banter.
With the feelings of my thoughts towards you baseball professionals, I do believe we have a mixed bag, so why don't we all just try the crate drill out on a few pitchers this spring and see what kind of results we get. I have an appointment with a player in around two weeks and will get a clip if I can locate a crate that is suitable. It does not have to be a coca-cola crate, any crate will do as long as it's not taller than 4 inches when placed on the ground. This will cause too drastic of a change. It's better to start with about four inches and work your way down to 2-3 inches in depth of box after foot has corrected the "flapper" wave of the landing foot. I call it the bye-bye wave
One thing I need to place emphasis on is the objective of this drill.
OBJECTIVE: Train pitcher/athlete to engage lower body by activating largest muscles in body in motion of delivery by keeping the landing foot as a integral part of the complete windup.
HSballcoach said it is best in his description of toe to heel.
HSBallcoach said: "The risk I see in teaching heal to toe is that the pitcher could start reaching with is leg and land solidly on the heal which would prevent the body from continuing to the plate in a fluid motion. Teaching a pitcher to land with the toe down will actually allow the pitcher to land flat footed due to the slope of the mound. I like to see a pitcher land flat footed to allow the body to continue to the plate and prevent the pitcher from spinning off his pitches."
HSBallcoach, you sir are absolutely correct IMHO.
In conclusion, I see the point cap'n makes in his concern as far as the obstruction of the crate, but remember, the pitcher will only use the crate drill for correction purposes of a crucial delivery fault which will increase power in the core of the rotation. You can look at the cap'n avatar and see the low path of the landing foot which would be impeded by a crate. That clip in your avatar cap'n is a one-in-a-million player who probably never had the need to correct a mechanical flaw such as the "flapper" bye-bye wave of the landing foot. A huge majority of pitchers do need to train the body to work to their advantage through drills such as this because they are just not born with the tall, lanky and rangy body such as this with tremendous flexibilty and natural abilty
That's a blessing cap'n, and you work with a lot like that, I know. This drill is for pitchers who are making early changes at all levels to better utilize body stength and increase velocity as well as control of pitches. A center that stays together,
stayslasts forever-Shepism
peace