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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: advice from a pro scout


Posted by: grc () on Wed Jul 18 09:52:19 2001


>>> GRC my mistake with the name above and I'm not advocating using the arm to throw the hands I'm advocating a cue if it works for someone to clear the hips and throw the hands,however what is actually happening is the hips open allowing the shoulder turn and then the arms and hands torque yet it feels like the hands are being thrown.Teach the process but in the end a hitter can't focus on the whole process so the beginning and end works for them,even though the middle is essential as well they just have it on auto pilot.I think Bonds idea of hitting a nail with a hammer may be his idea of putting that small sweet spot on the ball,helps his hand eye coordination. <<<
> > >
> > > Hi RQL
> > >
> > > I agree it is helpful to have a simple cue that can produce the entire motion we are looking for. But to most coaches, "clear the hips and throw the hands" has come to mean that the batter should "freeze the shoulders" and use the arms to throw the hands.
> > >
> > > What would you think of the cue "sling the hands?" Which means the batter would keep his hands back and allow shoulder rotation to sling the hands to the zone. This would entail using good lower and upper body rotational mechanics. It should also produce the proper angular hand-path while keeping the arms and hands in a good relationship to the rotating body. --- Your thoughts?
> > >
> > > Jack Mankin
> > > Jack,I agree it can be taken out of context by many coaches but these are great hitters and they have learned to incorporate a simple thought to produce the entire swing.I used almost the same words is why I felt strong that it could work as long as it is taught right.Sling the hands would work well also for some.often the way certain words flow through your lips and mind are what makes for a cue,try them both using clear the hips 1st and pass it on to students.A bigger issue here to me though is what is making the hands feel thrown or slung or released.Jack,I feel torque does little without shoulder rotation and I believe shoulder rotation does little without torque.Think of a car that starts out in 1st gear [hips]then smoothly transfers to 2nd[shoulder turn initiated] then jumps into 3rd where it can take off[torque being applied and together they accelerate the bat to another gear.If we say the throwing of ,or slinging of the hands comes from only shoulder rotation then I think we are missing it.Shoulders are essential,but your explanation of what torque is has really opened my eyes to the use of the hands and forearms.Its their relationship and timing with the shoulders that I feel give these hitters the feeling of throwing their hands.
>
> rql,Jack,grc et al-
>
> My understanding of Jack's work is that every swing is ideally a combo of stationary axis,circular hand path and constant application of torque from launch(or before) through contact.The real basic eye openers for me were the steering wheel knob,swivel chair and tht golf club drills on Jack's tape.The golf club drill demonstrates how tht can create rapid acceleration to top speed,more tht,the faster you get to max speed with the long(fixed) radius of the golf swing(golf grip engineered to minimize bht/maximize clubhead control).Jack has observed that the great hitters have learned to do this-they get the bathead out fast on the away pitch and hit it a long way with higher trajectory and more to the pull field than if they just waited on the ball and let it get deep.This swing requires a circular handpath with a longer radius,more tophand torque earlier and powerful rotation of less duration.Jack believes that the simplest/most consistent way to control this adjustment is by variation of hand torquing/direction of top hand pull at initiation so that on the outside pitch there is more tht and a wider swing radius created by direction of tht at initiation,after which ability to adjust greatly diminishes.When you hear pros talk about the cues they use,how do they describe this swing shape/adjustment?How do these cues fit with the reality Jack observes?


Tom.Guerry....was that you?..............i was especially impressed with the steering wheel knob experiment.....it clearly demonstrates the flaws in a "knob to the ball" swing for an inside pitch...........but tom, you said "the great hitters have learned to do this-they get the bathead out fast on the away pitch and hit it a long way with higher trajectory and more to the pull field than if they just waited on the ball and let it get deep.This swing requires a circular handpath with a longer radius" .........are you saying that you should PULL an outside pitch?.....please allow me to be more specific in my question: on an inside pitch,i feel that the optimal bat angle at contact (in relation to the front edge of the plate that faces the pitcher) is about +30 degrees....for a middle pitch, perhaps 0 degrees and for an outside pitch maybe -15 degrees......i know we may be generalizing here...there can be many exceptions, but please indulge me: it's easier for me to understand if we use reference points......what would YOU say are the optimal bat angles at contact?...............also, i'm sure i understand what you mean by This swing requires a circular handpath with a longer radius" , but just to be sure, are you saying that for an outside pitch the rear elbow is going to have to get farther away from the body?....if so, combine that with in effect trying to hit an outside pitch in front of the plate and you have "casting" (remember, Rx for casting is the fence drill!!!).............i don't know, tom, maybe if you have the time and pacience you can straighten me out, but i see some inconsistencies here......outside pitch, you seem to say pull it.....but then you subscribe to epsteins position that on an inside pitch you hit the inside part of the ball, I.E., inside-out the ball........sounds backwards to me.........respectfully, grc


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