TDS stop with your BS. Which plane do you think coil is in? I will tell you. ALL THREE.
Sorry Butter been there done that !! Trout could give a rats A$$ about coil.. It happens as part of good sequence vs shoehorning all other movements around it. Get fyb without allowing the weight to shift across the pelvis to the front leg and let the contraction swing the bat "down to" the ball.
julray, since we're just having a rousing discussion (not an arousing one...lol), as you "look back" at your DD's swings in hindsight, can you see some "over" the rear shoulder in her swings now - that forces her to "push" with her arms/hands more - instead of a path coming from "under" her rear shoulder - that might allow her body to "pull" the barrel to the ball a little better?
Have a good evening....we'll talk later.
Oh now we know what Mike is thinking? Big deal they don't use the word coil. I'm pretty sure he ain't up there thinking I better get into the S plane and leverage all of my available resources...
I bet he is isn't thinking about getting into a good sequence either. Or getting FyB without allowing his weight to shift across his pelvis.
Bigger movements require more imbalance. The resistance regains balance and arrests the movement.
Isn't running just a series of forward falls with the action of the leg elevating the body after each semi-fall? Create imbalance (lean) forward, move forward. The movement is controlled but the imbalance remains. Lean forward and use the force of gravity to accelerate.
Regain forward balance to stop movement. That's the resistance.
if we are just talking about the body’s movements. Then No. Sprinting is reciprocal rotation. Just like walking. You are working the upper against the lower to propel forward. The pelvis rotates one way while the the shoulders rotate the opposite way.
View attachment 17491
Think you could move/run in zero gravity? Everytime you pushed you'd take off and never land.Only if running downhill ...View attachment 17489
Hey DR, thanks for asking...Mud,
I am having a difficult time understanding this concept. What is it that you are referring to in regards to the shoulder? Is it the barrel that you are referring to? In an ideal path does anything ever really get "under" the shoulder? I keep picturing a DBSF type of path, which I know can't be right, so I am hoping you can help me out with my understanding of the concept.
Think you could move/run in zero gravity? Everytime you pushed you'd take off and never land.
Maybe just apply reciprocal motion?