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Re: Re: Re: Hands and Elbow


Posted by: rql () on Fri Aug 13 19:40:39 2004


Does any actually know what happens in the swing?
> > >
> > > While taping today my swing looked very good from the side. Similar to ML'ers. It looked like the hands stayed in and rotation brought them forward.
> > >
> > > After taping from a slightly different angle, side/front, the elbow seemed to be getting away from the body and the hands. I thought I was doing something wrong until I looked at Barry Bonds from the same angle, and his swing was very similar to mine. After that I looked at some front shots of Alex and could see the same thing once I knew it was there.
> > >
> > > Side shots just don't tell the whole story. Only a side/front view can tell excatly what the elbow and hands do in the swing.
> > >
> > > I thought I wasn't keeping the hands in enough during rotation until I looked at Bonds from the same angle. Which I happened to have a side view of the same swing that made it look like the hands stayed in more during the swing.
> > >
> > > We just don't have enough angles of swings to properly break down the swing. I believe the hands stay in more for an inside pitch, but what I saw today changed my view on middle/out.
> > >
> > > Shawn
> > >>>>shawn when you saw your elbow away from the ribs[normal slot point for inside]was this on the middle out pitch you were hitting.
>
> RQL,
>
> I was only swinging the bat. Just a normal swing, middle or middle out.
>
> The next time I will pretend to hit different locations and see what happens.
>
> I find it funny that what I percieved as correct, keeping the hands in, wasn't what really happened. I thought it was a flaw in my swing at first. Jack talked about how the bat is projected many years ago, but I tend to think of swing mechanics as middle in.
>
> It would be nice if we could follow some hitters and get multiple angles that would debunk some myths about the swing. It's easy to see when a hitter pull the hands in on an inside pitch, it's not as clear on what happens for pitches middle and away. I can see it better now that I'm looking for it, but you don't have that 45 degree angle from the opposite batter box to look at.
>
> Shawn
<<

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