[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Re: Re: ks, contact and your methods


Posted by: Larry () on Wed Jul 26 09:07:18 2000


>>>Why do you think strike outs are continuing to rise each year? The strike zone is smaller, one would think the opposite should be true. Does it have anything to do with the circular hand path, Most doing it in the MLB now. If I advocated your mechanics this winter for a massive reengineer of my team kid's mechanics would I be giving up anything regarding average for power?<<<
> >
> > Hi Larry
> >
> > I'm not sure what the strikeout percentage is today. But I can assure you that low batting averages and high strike out rates are not inherent with a circular hand-path. Otherwise, how would we explain a Ted Williams, George Brett or many of the hitters who consistently won the crown for high batting averages.
> >
> > Strikeouts may be up but so are batting, slugging and home run averages. In today's games, 15 to 25 hits are becoming commonplace. Maybe with the circular hand-path, routine fly balls and soft grounders are getting fewer and the pitches must rely more on strike outs -- just a thought.
> >
> > Jack Mankin
> >
> > jack...i would love to give credit to the circular hand path for contributing to increase in slugging & home run averages.....and, for that matter, i would like to credit the increasing realization that FENCE DRILL MECHANICS will contribute to opposite-field bloopers but not home runs......but......don't you think that a SIGNIFICANT contributing factor is the continual expansion of the number of major league teams?? (i.e., DILUTION of the quality of pitching)....grc...

Pitching is certainly part of it but improved mechanics/training is the other. Still I am befuddled by the nearly doupled ks in the mlb the last twenty years. Pitching is weaker with a few studs scattered around the league. Why so many ks? weaker pitching usually means more hits fewer ks.


Followups:

Post a followup:
Name:
E-mail:
Subject:
Text:

Anti-Spambot Question:
How many innings in an MLB game?
   4
   3
   9
   2

   
[   SiteMap   ]