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Not really, Coach....the key to learning retention is understanding, not the repetitions......Repetitions do nothing to the brain....The understanding process does, though.......Repetitions and muscle memory are for the most part, myths.....
Sorry BlueDog but I found something else I don't agree with on what you say. I know I dropped the subject in the hitting forum but I can't let this one go.
So lets say you have a kid who has been on the team for 3 years and is now a senior. he starts the preseason with a bad habit of "stepping in the bucket" (front foot moves away from straight line and goes toward 3B if RH hitter).
First - if understanding is what teaches players then how do you explain that this kid developed that habit? If he understands that stepping in the bucket is bad then why does he do it?
Second - when you see that flaw and you tell him - why is it on the next pitch he does it (although he may not do it as bad or he had to really think about not doing it) OR if he does correct it then 2 or 3 pitches later he goes back to stepping in the bucket?
Third - so when you are watching an infant learn to walk you see the parents holding the child by the arms with their feet touching the ground so he can move his legs in a walking manner is not a drill? What about when a child is learning to talk - the parents take the child and make them watch their mouth so they can start to mimic the mouth movements and learn to talk?
Those are not things you understand - those are things a child does over and over until they master it. Everytime they do it they find something that does not work and try to eliminate or perfect something. That is what drills do - they perfect things by focusing on something specific so you can put the whole thing together during the game.