[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Re: Slump


Posted by: LivoniaDave (cardsharkdave@yahoo.com) on Thu Jul 14 10:24:01 2005


> For what it's worth, two of your 3 points relate directly to the mental aspect of baseball. And your 3rd point (which is actually your second one as listed), may, in fact, be mental. If you start wondering and worrying if its the bat, the problem becomes a mental one. I don't personally think the bat is an issue just based on what you wrote.
>
> Get the proper swing down and then TRUST IT. Go up there believing you will hit the ball. Yet realize that if you don't this particular at-bat, you will get the next one. By that I mean don't dwell on failures, because it only heightens the worry response.


It's funny you should mention that, because I have mad most all of those adjustments. I know for a fact that there is only about a 20% difference between the strength, coordination, speed etc. in baseball players, but I know that there aren't that many great hitters. I knew the slump was mostly mental, but I also knew i was trusting me swing (my mechanics were great in practice and such), but it seemed that maybe I thought a change in bat would give me what I thought was a new start, which it did, and it helped. I know my batspeed and such was good at a 33" but a change did me well. The funny thing is, my teammates were makin jokes about me moving down to a 32" for a few weeks, and when I used it, I started hitting with authority again. It's all mental, and I'm glad I made the switch. The videos I watched of myself were a huge help too, sometimes you can surprise yourself if you haven't seen yourself hit before. thanks for the responses..

dave
>
> Understand it's ok to be nervous / anxious. That's where trusting the swing you practiced over and over comes into play. You know you have the write swing mechanics, so even though your a bit anxious, you can still trust your swing and know that you'll get the desired results. But you must first be confident in your swing mechanics. Do visualization exercises where you see yourself getting solid hits. Video tape an at-bat where you hit the ball well, and just watch it over and over to burn into your subconscious the proper swing mechanics with the expected results.


Followups:

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

Anti-Spambot Question:
This song is traditionally sung during the 7th inning stretch?
   All My Roudy Friends
   Take Me Out to the Ballgame
   I Wish I was in Dixie
   Hail to the Chief

   
[   SiteMap   ]