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Analysis
| Hitting do's and don'ts, training devices, etc. | Album by John Sigler. 21 - 31 of 31 Total. 13696 Visits. |
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 21 Bat drag - youth hitter compared with Guerrero. Bat drag causing the fulcrum of the swing to be at the rear elbow and results in a long (i.e., slow) swing. Bat dragging kids will often show a lot of power - when they make contact.
|  22 Bat drag (see blurred rear elbow getting ahead of rear hand)
|  23 Bat drag - top hand elbow getting ahead of top hand.
|  24 Bat drag - commonly leads to a powerful but very long youth swing.
|  25 Hi-speed overhead view (with bat drag?)
|  26 Paul Nyman's "medicus" training bat. Disconnection and swing plane issues are exacerbated with this bat.
|  27 Hinge bat ($200) - from MetalWood Bats.
|  28 My hinge bat ($5.50).
My rope bat ($2.80). Made from 3-ft of 1-1/2" manilla rope (found at a specialty hardware store).
|  29 Hinge bat closeup: old 34" bat with 4" removed, connected by heavy duty two eyebolts and single adjustable chain link (which take up the removed 4").
|  30 Jeter head & eye movement during the swing. The 4 small colored lines drawn on each photo indicate Jeter's eye level at the 4 points of this swing:
1. early stance (top blue line taken from top left photo eye level), 2. beginning stride (green line taken from top right photo eye level), 3. heel plant (red line taken from lower left photo eye level), 4. contact (bottom blue line taken from bottom left photo eye level)
Notice that Jeter's head & eyes move (very typically of elite hitters) - including during the swing (i.e., between heel plant and contact). Jeter does seem to watch the ball to the bat until contact - something that many other elite hitters don't do. Summarizing, cues from coaches to keep the head perfectly still and watch the bat hit the ball generally aren't backed up by video evidence.
|  31 Another comparison of the Mike Epstein fence drill to a real swing.
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Whoaa. Thats cool and very helpful! THankyou!! - Alyssa , Thu, 10 Jul 2008 5:41PM |
Your clips are very informative,I especially like Sorianos which shows the necessary rotational,away from the pitcher load up which is necessary to time the pitch and uncoil into the ball and allows the hips to lead the way, the rotational coil up allows the hips and hands to cock and the uncoil lets the hips lead the way and gets the hands started,I am not especially fond of the leg hike for inexperienced players,I like to teach them to use only the rotational movements necessary to stay on the pitch, I like to use Ryan Howard,Jim Edmond's,Pujols and those who mostly just rotate from their stance,I feel that the inexperienced youth should learn to use as few movements as possible to get the job accomplished,I also feel that they should not let go of the bat during their swing due to premature release at point of contact, also those who hit right and throw left or vice-verse are subject to reinjure the healing bat side arm during follow through.I really like your box and angle diagrams,it is the little things that count. - Don Ervin, Sun, 6 Jul 2008 9:54AM |
Hey John, thats a hell of a photojob displaying some of the suspected discrepancies between teaching and good ball performance. - Edward Jay, Tue, 1 Jul 2008 3:51AM |
excellent job here very informative & helpful as usual, great source of information coming off of Englishbey website - steve bottando, Thu, 18 Oct 2007 12:25PM |
Great Sight John. I've been following Steve's plan the past 18 months. These help a bunch in showing me, my sons, and my students. - COACH TRAV, Mon, 9 Jul 2007 12:07PM |
As a visual learner this site is very helpful. I will be sharing this with my daughters and other players as the needs arise. Helps to have good comparisons. - Matthew Sawyer | www.SkiButternut.com, Wed, 13 Jun 2007 12:53PM |
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