skip ahead to the 6:40 mark thru 7:40. He says it is an absolute but he is wrong. It may be preferable but plenty of great hitters have a hint of ABAF in their swing.
Thanks WW, i do have the DB presentation i will go back and review.Much improved FB!
I agree w you. The upper body stretch needs some work. The BB double stretch drill needs a bit of context. I try to keep the front elbow down and out of plane to enhance the core stretch and segmenting of the swing. A simple cue of keeping the barrel vertical longer helps also.
the back leg anchor is a prerequisite for the body to load properly. There is a chipper Jones video floating around. That’s how I teach it.
Search the site for Donny Busters presentation. A lot of good info in there.
A tale of 2 force producers.
I’m not picking on you FB. Just trying to shed some light on sequential loading and unloading or more loading? Maybe a thought of ‘closing’ should be loading and ‘opening’ can be thought of as unloading. As well as a few compensatory movements which can hinder a good sequence.
the first toss swing. The hands load out of sequence(early) so they unload (cast) early. Pulling the ball correctly becomes tough. A longer swing ensues; Usually ends up cheating to the inside. The entire load should take place during the forward move.
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The second swing the hands don’t load at all and come w the hips so the core isn’t being utilized. Outside pitches become hard to stay on.
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i would work on movement and creating better angles for these particular issues. It’s a case of less is more. Maybe try a Bregman cue with the ‘flashlights’. The effect of that thought creates tighter turns and quicker segmented swings. Try a ‘chest back’ towards the catcher thought. It takes the arms and shoulders out of it early and gets the core more involved. The cue I gave previously about trying to keep the front elbow ‘down’ is apart of the same theory. You could do the feet crossed tee drill. It starts a player closed and the cue is ‘try to stay closed’. Or ‘maintain your angles’ longer.
for me it’s about staying closed and out of plane until committal. That’s where the explosion comes from. And even after launch the feet are trying to stop the opening of the hips etc etc up the chain. It’s a continuous opening and closing.
A check point I use all the time is toe-touch. A player should still be closed w their upper body, bat still closed (positions vary) w the hips a bit open or square (time dependent) and the core stretched. That’s the important part. But the hips opening are a result of staying closed w the upper and lower longer so the stretch reflex can activate.
Hope this helps.