Correction for swinging over the ball

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May 22, 2008
350
0
NW Pennsylvania
I have found a lot of times the girls are not turning their head to see the ball at contact & are looking straight ahead & swinging where they see the ball 10 or 15 feet in front of the plate. as the ball drops they swing over- they have to have it explained that " watch the ball" means at the contact point.
 
May 12, 2008
2,210
0
If it's going reasonable speed the eye can't track it to contact. That's why movement pitches work.
 
Jul 17, 2008
65
0
in the dugout
If it's going reasonable speed the eye can't track it to contact. That's why movement pitches work.


you know i've always heard it taught to watch the bat make contact with the ball but i can honestly say when i get in the cage and hit the fastballs i do not see it make contact. i always figured that's why i'm a forty something fat guy that coaches fastpitch instead of being a former major leaguer:D
 

pdj

May 7, 2008
26
0
Swinging Over The Ball

From a pitching perspective, picking the batter, I look at the batter's grip. Too many younger players get get the bat in a death hold too deep in the palm of the hands.
 
341

allot of times kids will drop there hands when the ball is on the way to the plate, swing under the ball.

You could also try setting the tee on a 5 gallon bucket were the ball is at the top of the chest and hit a bucket of balls. Try to keep your hands alittle above the barrel of the bat on the swing.


In simple terms:
Keep hands in same location across chest as you lower the tee. That means the barrel will drop as the tee is lowered. You can achieve this by tilting (bending) at the waist more, the lower the tee the more you tilt at the waist while keeping the hands going across the chest.



Then go back to the machine.







Straightleg

I'd stay away from the machines. They typically don't throw the ball with the same spin as a real pitcher---therefore the pitch from a machine has a different path than that of a real pitcher. Secondly, there is very little value in the timing used from a machine vs. the timing of hitting live pitching. Ever notice how many kids can knock the crude out of the ball off a machine but can't hit live pitching.
 
May 12, 2008
2,210
0
I think Straightleg's protocol is very very good. I've used it many times after being introduced to it by Howard Hashida. As to the machine yeah I've got some of the same concerns but during this phase the machine should be set slow enough that timing is not a big factor. Having said that, my steps would be slow dry swings, tee work, soft toss, front toss, etc. mixing in the high tee where needed...briefly.

I should add the tee lowering phase should eventually go all the way down to the knees and a little lower. Check Siggy's analysis page frequently during this.

Can't hit a line drive on a shoulder high ball if you drop your hands as you start to swing. You can have some fun with this if you practice it first to make sure you can do it after they can't. ;)
 
Aug 1, 2008
2,314
63
ohio
The hitting coach I learned from, takes a machine and sets it up waist high hitting baseballs.
He has the batter take a swing, take one step forward, swing one step forward ect. then he has them go backwards.

He mix's it up with different speeds and inside and outside pitching. It is all for timing and rythym.

The person feeding the machine makes a arm circle so the batter can load and go through there swing mechanics.

A machine has it's place.

But I also do what mark h does. Soft toss from all over, I pitch from 15-20 feet standing behind a L- screen plus other things. Just mixing it up.


Straightleg
 

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