Skip to main content

Baseball is the same the world over. For hitters, if you do not get your hands back and your front foot down early, you cannot hit a baseball. You see it over and over. Most kids never get to the launch position in time to swing. Whats worse is that most coaches don't know it!. IMO they never make adjustments in their set up against fast pitching when they are over matched
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

At the youth level a lot of issues with hitters are mental issues. When facing faster pitching many young hitters begin wondering/doubting if they can even hit it. That uneasy feeling in the box leads to broken down mechanics and if the mechanics aren't very good to begin with the hitter is in a lot of trouble.

There are "quick fix" things that can be done to help a hitter succeed (i.e. hands back). In the "instruction" world that is probably the best approach to take. You want a kid to succeed and the sooner the better. But in the "real" world, where parents like myself work with their own children, developing the potential to its fullest is the goal. Short term results vs development (long term results).

In my opinion young hitters just don't know how to rotate efficiently. That won't change regardless of where they start their hands or if they get their front foot down on time. That is where I'd start, but I'm not a instructor. Wink

Jason
Last edited by FlippJ
I don't think, physiologically speaking, most 12-under kids CAN rotate efficiently. It may be that there's simply not enough space between the hips and lower spine yet, or simply that there's very little core strength (and not much you can do about it until the growth/musculature hormones kick in). Teach the skill now, and let them struggle away with it for now. By the time their bodies are ready to actually separate/rotate, they'll be ahead of the curve.

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×