- Aug 1, 2019
- 81
- 18
Good luck with that..
[/QUOTE
no luck needed
Good luck with that..
[/QUOTE
no luck needed
Yep. But from a practical sense, if I tell a player to laterally tilt, I may feel really smart, but I could fail to communicate the idea.Bobby, the thing that puts the shoulders in that plane is the lateral tilt.
That’s best advice, let Grandma keep takIng her before you learn enough to become dangerous LOLI'll have to talk to my dd about it more. I was at work and her grandma took her.
the hands are active from the start. that makes the ‘swing’ go. The first goal is ‘get on top’... the ‘floating’ of the hands so to speak. That’s why the feel and real is swing down. That’s the link. from there they launch the swing.
the swing works the same way north/south as it does east/west. If your constantly attacking from outside the ball, that’s not good. if your always attacking from underneath, that’s not good either. So pros set the back arm pretty tight to stay inside and get above the ball from the start of the sequence to stay on top. So they must swing down to multitude of degrees.
pay attention to the shoulder tilt.
Do you think you can still have bat drag with the Swingrail? Seems like it helps keep hands close to shoulder but may not address lag. just curious. thanks.Doing a bit of thread resurrection here. My DD was at practice this evening and they were using the Swingrail hitting aide. I noticed how they had to move, especially the hand path, for the Swingrail to work as intended. It was really an aha moment for me and I can see what you are talking about with regards to "swing down" and how it works in relation with the shoulder tilt.
Always a great feeling when after all these years you can still learn something.
Do you think you can still have bat drag with the Swingrail? Seems like it helps keep hands close to shoulder but may not address lag. just curious. thanks.
The thing everyone needs to see from the OU hitters is the front foot up while pitcher has ball and control of the stride with the back leg. I think working on this will benefit all DDs greatly
She turned it forward on that one!Cornbread, just because it's your pattern of choice doesn't make it correct.. The rear leg/hip is important (fyb) but trying to control the move out with the rear leg prevents the use of the lead side. Feel free to rob your student of being an athlete but stop leading others with the narrative.
Not what's happening here.
Sluggers don't receive instruction growing up. Everyone is afraid to touch them.What I would like to see, which we never are privvy to, is what type of instruction these players had when they were growing up.