BOFquote:
”So where does this energy go if there is no additional benefit from the initial velocity of the body?”
It goes by the way in which it came. If you took your FLIR video (forwards looking infrared radar video) and used it to view the front of the pitchers plate right after the pitcher leaves it you would se an increase in heat at the dirt and front edge of the rubber then you would point the FLIR at he accelerator muscles for the slits leg action, the small but primary mover Tensor facia late will show up as have just used a lot of energy.
In the same manor when the glove foot lands (at least 70% of your standing height or more) in the traditional motion by the motion being perturbed against forwards direction by coming to a complete halt the then heat signature will now show up as heated dirt at the land pit plus the larger musculature stopping the preceding momentum would use the corresponding energy that those larger set of muscles set of muscles would have used, now I have counted for 4 areas of energy use from start to stop.
quote:
“I may not know much about pitching.”
How could any of us know unless we were the ones using High speed video?
quote:
“I do know that there is conservation of energy”
Its not the energy I’m worried about it is the inertia from already spent energy!
In biological terms conservation is very important from joint to joint in that when one muscle fires off its antagonist muscle becomes a drag and pulled to length by the contracting muscle and continual overlapped contractions should not have kinetic breaks in them as the traditional crotch drive.
quote:
“This energy is either released in heat or sound. (which is not much in this case)”
You are correct heat. (its measurable)
quote:
”What I “see” in the Lincecome video is that he has some linear forward momentum that is converted to rotational momentum once he gets to foot strike.”
Nothing can happen in throwing or batting until the glove arm foot or front side foot touches down, once this happens you either have your bodies mass behind the plant, on top of the plant or the preferable ahead of the strike so that you can either come to a stop (traditional), continue momentum poorly into the top or by the mass being ahead you can the use this leg also because the mass is in front of it can have push towards second base also.
Rotational contractions are counted as degrees of counter to forwards rotation and the first 10 to 20 degrees that you see the hips open up into foot plant are not voluntary hard contraction, they are slow and deliberate involuntary rebound and leg opening hip swivel, when the foot finally lands you see all forwards inertia come to a complete stop, now the core can contract against the legs so you can now voluntarily contract your hips harder, now mind you during all this time the arm is still not fully transitioned yet and the ball is actually moving backwards.
quote:
“At foot strike the force moves up his body though his torso”
And stops it also until he gets rotated so then he can start his acceleration phase.
This now force is also still energy?
quote:
“out through his arm to the ball.”
The legs and hips are isometricly contracted at this point after having to get you through the transition phase and only the concentric contractions of the core then torso then shoulder then arms then fingers count towards home.
quote:
“ If we could look at him with “strain gages” in his body and in time lapse you would see this force translate up through his leg and into his arm.”
You better not let
gotwood4sale see this quote!!!
quote:
“There is of course and equal and opposite force down through his leg.”
I knew Newton would show up!
quote:
“There is also additional force provided by his core muscles that provide additional energy into the ball, but we are not talking about this.”
Sorry I already mentioned the core and I’m not changin it.
quote:
”I will give you another example of this”
That is only if you had already given me a good example?
quote:
“If you watch Treveor Bauer pitch he always starts out at the beginning of an inning with a little step-behind-crow-step when he first gets to the mound.
He’s a crazy wonderful kid, can you imagine him with full Marshall mechanics Whoaaaa.
The Crowstep is performed only one way and that’s step to the front, you must mean drop step or carrie-oakey where the oakey is performed. To bad he steps behind! This is a poor mechanic allowing over early rotation, producing centripetal imperative one of the injurious gateways.
quote:
“If you watch the velocity when he does this it is always 2-3 MPH greater than what he is normally pitching at”
I’ve seen it live and never noticed anybody gun his warm ups?
I doubt that when a guy first gets the ball in his hands after a long warm down is going max effort to start?
quote:
“Where did this additional energy come from”
It comes from that super short step he takes allowing him to stay taller and rotate more when throwing with a more towards the model I am advocating for.!
quote:
“Of course it comes from converting his linear momentum into rotational momentum and on to the ball.”
Remember the rotational movements are contracted by completely different muscles and of course counter-conserves any linear movement in them selves, they are basically rotating and the hip mass not moving forwards either!
quote:
“ There is no other source of it”
All movements are individually contracted and countable.
quote:
“his body is still the same there is no magic energy beam involved”
Are you saying I said there was a magic beam that counted in the contraction tally?
quote:
“ So in fact there is “some” energy provided by this momentum”
Yes it is accounted for at the start and culminates in it’s finish with a whole nother phase to go through before the ball even starts forwards in its phase.
quote:
“and I agree with you it is not a lot, but 2-3 MPH is the difference between a good HS pitcher and a college pitcher so it should not be ignored”
Wait a minute? I don’t agree with you here, I’m saying all the forwards mass MPH is lost! You can see it by just counting how many frames pass from when the foot land where the legs and body come to a complete stop to when the acceleration contractions phase start.
quote:
”This is not directly but indirectly related, but AMSI has studied high velocity pitchers and they have discovered that high velocity pitchers are the best at getting the timing right in this energy release”
Your kidding me right? This company has botched the transition from the get go and continued in filling OR’s with their nominal mechanics showing you that their pro pitchers all have different mechanics even the un-named ones. Their transition timing is late giving you the poorest (injury related) timing!
quote:
“These pitchers (and Lincecum is a prime example of this) are able to convert whatever linear momentum they have and get the timing of the release of the core muscular energy precisely so they apply maximum force to the ball over a very short period of time.
Your problem here is you keep mixing postural phases in the same timeline.
quote:
“I agree that it may or may not be 20% as Tom House has suggested and it probably is a guess.
I don’t see any probablies here if he said it.Maybe he really did not say it? And we are just blowing smoke up our own pituts- leave that one alone gotwood.
quote:
“but he is probably not more than 5-7% off IMO”
This is a problem and I’ll bet Tom has seen High speed video by now?
[quote]”One other comment, it means nothing if the ball has stopped in this process”
Another other comment, It means that all the movements down then up then loop then backwards then to a complete stop that none of the balls previous movements add to the velocity of the ball once it starts its final acceleration phase towards home plate. Same principle.
quote:
“since the linear forces have not moved up the body to the ball just yet.”
I cant see this force that takes 48 frames to travel then store then up through the transition that then heads backwards before it heads forewords. But then that just me?
quote:
“There is a time element to the translation of linear momentum”
Yes, 2 MPH’s gets stopped fast before the rotational muscles finally turn on.
quote:
“to rotational momentum as the forces move up the body to the arm”
Is this what makes the ball go backwards as the rotational contractions decelerate?
quote:
“Now Marshall is correct that it puts additional wear and tear on the body”
Well now, being that Marshall has an exact mechanical call out and corresponding fix for every conceivable injurious mechanical movement produced that does not mean that adults can not do what ever they want to their bodies, I’m just worried about the kids!
quote:
“but you cannot deny full the body physics involved”
Newton is Marshalls pitching Guru, he admits it himself!
quote:
“Of course there are all kinds of intramuscular activity, which is not related to this discussion”
How does the linear momentum miss these activities with all that time going by?
In conclusion, the longer you stride the more forceful the downward movement of you bodies mass ends up eliminating downward plain and the further behind the landing leg you end up allowing lesser rotational length and power by attaining lesser rotation during ball acceleration.
I now ask of you that which I asked of you long before this, where is this energy stored that has now changed directions 3 times?
Jdfromfla,quote:
“Yard my problem with your analysis is that you focus on the legs stopping as if it isn't”
No No, I focus on the legs stopping as if it is.
quote:
“BOF points out, a sequence in a chain”
BOF made no chaining comments that was me. He was talking about energy being stored somewhere along the way. I’m the one that said there a several disconnections in the Kinetic chain along the traditional delivery timeline.
Marshall critiqued Outman when he was in HS (Outman)with some good things and bad, he uses a Marshall style short leg drive that allows him to rotate farther than traditional allowing him to end up in a drop step position and a better rotational perfomance but starts with his forearm forwards causing a centripetal loop that will eat away at his shoulder, when he started his momentum home his arm leaves the head and assumes the highguard, goal posted position (like Pryor)very problematic like where catchers get to and where many traditional pitchers get to from the pendulum swing, no different in reality. With his triceps pointing backwards he eliminates its use at any time a classic disconnection in the Kinetic chain.
quote:
”What I think it really illustrates is that there is more than one way to train up a pitcher, what would the art be without the uniqueness and individuallity”
Thats why I thought it would possibly fly when I looked in to it but dang thing happened on the way to the yard, the kids that Crowhop deliver are asked to play right field and won’t be given the ball, now I know how confidence works in this game and if all coaches a kid runs into along the levels path balk at every little movement, it does not bode well for its acceptance or cultivation.
quote:
“Gibson or Marishall”
Two of the greatest pronators, Marishall was a linear projector like Marshall and Lincecum with some nasty screwball action and Sinker very close to Marshalls transitions.
He brought the ball up with his hand underneath, that little pie thrower. It only makes sense that the Giants also got Lincecum.
Cadad,quote:
“Everybody has an ideal stride length and for most pitchers longer means throwing harder, up to a point.”
I have witnessed the opposite effect in all age groups but then I teach a different top half also.