As respectfully as possible I totally disagree with the idea of getting on plane with the lead arm and/or the body
How about "above the plane"
As respectfully as possible I totally disagree with the idea of getting on plane with the lead arm and/or the body
I 'm not sure if he is on DFP but Juan Soriano on Twitter (CoachJSoriano) is showing some amazing progressions with the hitters he works with. Check him out. Not sure if there anyone else that shows as many hitters as he does.[/QUOTE
Can you explain the band that he used only on the lead elblow/hand? Seeing that everywhere but not explanation.
How is her back foot causing her to stand up?
Not necessarily...
The rear leg had some ER to it which put the knee at an angle behind, and way from the rear hip (which in essence lowered her in her stance further than just the bent knees). So as soon as she started to IR the rear leg, and bring the rear knee under the rear hip, the length of her rear femur didn't change which has to be accounted for, and since the rear knee only dropped slightly, the remainder of that length had to go somewhere, and that was "up"...pushing the rear hip/body up as well that's sitting on top of it.
From Donny Buster:
-- The angle created between the bat and the lead forearm is called the hinge angle.
* The most common swing flaw in youth hitters is failure to form and maintain the hinge angle to front foot plant.
* Taking the hinge angle near the lead pocket with the bat in the lag position creates power.
* Moving the hinge angle such that it is maintained and released out front is a great weight shift cue.
Like I said previously, there used to be a tendency to over-bake this. I see it as a visual checkpoint type thing. I don't think a hitter should be forcefully training to maintain the hinge. But when it isn't present, it is a sign that something is missing. I will let Cal-Rays explain the 'over-active back arm', but I believe it is visible due to what happens with the hinge angle.
I 'm not sure if he is on DFP but Juan Soriano on Twitter (CoachJSoriano) is showing some amazing progressions with the hitters he works with. Check him out. Not sure if there anyone else that shows as many hitters as he does.[/QUOTE
Can you explain the band that he used only on the lead elblow/hand? Seeing that everywhere but not explanation.
CB, please re-read my post. Thank you
CB, please re-read my post. Thank you
This is very accurate in my opinion ' Its casting and trailing. not much bat control with this swing. Its what i think of when MUD talks about his swing theory.
it can be fixed very easy.