[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Re: Re: Re: Look at All the Facts


Posted by: bob (bob@bobburnett.com) on Sun May 28 13:42:05 2006


> Hi Anon,
>
> "If you did in fact hit like that, pitches on the inner half of the plate would now be like
pitches on the inside black, and pitches on the inside black would now be unhittable."
>
> I beg to differ! Pitches can rarely pitch inside consistently anymore without being
warned. This means that 100% of the plate no longer belongs to the pitcher--only 66 2/
3% of it!
>
> This statement is also without merit: "Since apparantally you are a 'scholar' and not a
ball player, let me explain some baseball lingo to you."
>
> Personally, I have seen my action on the field as a home run hitter in slo-pitch softball,
and have acquired noble sucess by pulling every pitch.
>
> By the way, with less than two strikes, the strike zone shrinks to less than 66 2/3%.
This means that, with less than two strikes, a batter can look to pull all pitches, and pass
balls up that they do not like. If, with two strike, the batter chooses to make contact with
ball instead of swinging for the fence, then that is understandable.
>
> This should prove that, contrary to your hypothesis, I do have a fundamental grasp of
baseball.
>
> Best,
> BHL

Hi BH,
If you crowd the plate, you're asking for an inside pitch.

With all due respect, you have to admit that a batting strategy for slow pitch can't
necessarily be applied across the board to fastpitch and baseball.

In slow pitch, if you crowd the plate and get an inside pitch, there's plenty of time to
make adjustments.


Followups:

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

Anti-Spambot Question:
This slugger ended his MLB career with 714 homeruns?
   Tony Gwynn
   Babe Ruth
   Sammy Sosa
   Roger Clemens

   
[   SiteMap   ]