- Jun 8, 2016
- 16,118
- 113
Marcela has a tournament this weekend..I am just trying to get it all out now.Breath LOL
Marcela has a tournament this weekend..I am just trying to get it all out now.Breath LOL
Don't worry rain will take care of itMarcela has a tournament this weekend..I am just trying to get it all out now.
Well she has one next weekend too so all that means is I will be able to be profane on here all next week too..Don't worry rain will take care of it
Or could just be clip selection. She looks early on the first (almost like an OS pause), and on time with the second. I like the second one also...stayed "back" much better as you mentioned ("former is less FYB").The ‘across’ got her flat ??? Changed the timing ? I’m not sure.
Should we start a GoFundMe account for Marcela's new hitting instructor?I don't care what you guys say Launching from where she does in the new swing just looks and feels weaker to me..
She has been playing with a handicap since the beginning...luckily I don't think she listens to me anyway. Only thing I ever did which has been beneficial is marry somebody who is athletic (and blind obviously).Should we start a GoFundMe account for Marcela's new hitting instructor.
W=w...Grey swing gives me the feels of maintaining her weight on the rear side longer (I like that), but is pulling with the front side. The front side pull became a real issue for my DD, leading to a giant hole on low-out, and pulling the barrel laterally across the ball through contact. It also resulted in a similar flatter bat path. Maybe this will work well for your DD. It didn't for mine.
Thanks for posting video.
Eric, do you have an example of your daughters swing where the front side pulled off ?
I noticed this as well with many of my hitters, and where the term, "Hit the ball with your rear hip" came from.I'd have to go digging through my phone for video. I had a good shot from behind during a game swing, and it was clear how her front shoulder was pulling her head arm, which was pulling her hands laterally during contact. For my DD, getting away from that involved changing the focus more to the rear hip. It works for her. Everyone is built differently.