quote:
Originally posted by Chameleon:
Hmmmmmm....
I guess you overlooked this.
What does the barrel do before any pulling of the knob of any kind occurs?
The barrel has gone from vertical/cocked to lag and the hands are still where?........at the arm pit.
Absolutely no pulling of the knob and he's a couple of frames into his swing.
No, I didn't overlook anything. As I said, the barrel turns because his elbow tucks into his side. He is tucking his elbow and pulling the knob to the ball (you say pitcher because you can't bear to say to the ball) at the same instant. The thing for you to do is call Mr. Gwynn and ask him what he is doing. It's just like throwing a baseball, a pitcher doesn't conciously try to lay his arm down when he throws, it just happens. Because, during the act of hitting and pitching the bottom half is torquing away from the upper half, there is a moment of hesitation in the bat in hitting and the ball in throwing, that is what causes the whip or "rubberband" effect.
You know, there are Scientists that still say it is impossible to make a baseball curve in 60'6" too! It is much more logical to me to take what the hitter says he is doing and then figure out what happens when he actually does it. Where you take each part and try to fit it into your THEORY on hitting.
You say, "What does the barrel do before any pulling of the knob of any kind occurs?". Right there you admit that he IS pulling the knob!
By tucking his elbow, he is getting on the "plane of the pitch". His "flat bat" is at his waist which is the middle of the strike zone. His bottom hand then guides the bat to the height and general location of the pitch. His eyes stay on the ball and his natural hand eye coordination work together to use his top hand to throw the sweetspot through the ball. His natural ability will help get his body into position to hit the ball (meaning, he will lean/tilt or whatever).
IMO, it is a hitting instructors job to get a hitter in the best position to start his swing and to get them in the best position at contact to get through the ball. Once you teach a hitter the basics (which most do automatically) balance and concentration are the main things that falter and cause slumps.
I believe that getting the "flat bat" on the "plane of the pitch" as soon as possible and taking the "knob to the ball" (in that order) are the two most important parts of the swing itself. But, hey, that's just my "THEORY".