But based on very limited response/audience here it's not worth the time and efforts.
But based on very limited response/audience here it's not worth the time and efforts.
A loose arm.Amanda doesn’t say how and is only talking about a loose arm. What goes into letting it happen?
But when it comes to pitching a softball there is a different dynamic happening which I'm not totally sure I understand.
Which brings me to why I am here. Would very much like to continue discussion on the the softball pitching process with respect to how it happens. How does the whipping process actually manifests itself in pitching a softball?
In noodling around on some of the topics I also found some of the "IR" discussion I read. Also the debate between HE and IR which I believe relates directly to the discussion of "Arm Whip".
verb move fast or suddenly in a specified direction.
"I whipped around the corner"
He and a changing supporting cast that included only a catcher, first baseman and shortstop eventually logged more than 4 million miles, covering 50 states and more than 100 countries to play in front of 200 million people.
They played racetracks, stockyards, rodeo grounds, cemeteries, pastures, an oil rig off Norway’s coast and the Houston Astrodome. On “The Tonight Show,” a blindfolded Feigner knocked a cigar from Johnny Carson’s mouth.
In 1972, Sports Illustrated called Feigner, who pitched 238 perfect games, the most underrated athlete of his time. He said: “I’m a pipsqueak because I’m caught in a nothing game. It’s like being a world-champion nose-blower.”
In 2000, the same magazine ranked the King and His Court as the United States’ eighth-greatest team of the 20th century. In 2002, ESPN.com listed Feigner as one of the 10 greatest pitchers in a list that included Walter Johnson and Sandy Koufax.
In the 1940s, when countless small towns had softball leagues, the King and His Court was one among many barnstormers. By the 1960s, Feigner was top dog and made $100,000 a month at a time when baseball stars headed for the Hall of Fame made $100,000 a year.