- Jun 8, 2016
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“High-end averages”…very mathematical
because there are not many “total studs”…Curious what your thoughts are on why only 1 stayed a total stud.
What I witness is that many girls simply don't put in the work. Under 10U, pitchers see improvement every week, every lesson. They go from a top speed of 42 to 43 to 44 to 45 practically overnight.
Then it all plateaus... improvements come very slowly, mph is added over months, not days/weeks. It's really hard, repetitive work. And the work is very small adjustments and takes amazing body awareness and control. It becomes a job. Keeping my DD motivated can sometimes be hard. I've kind of learned to not push much and hope her love of the game and competition keeps her driving and striving.
My DD is one of those you speak about. Finally getting her in regularly with a Rick Pauley instructor. Two in person lessons per month and 3-4 designed app based workouts per week.
The work is long and it takes determination to keep doing it. But she wants to and understands that to be better than everyone else, you have to outwork everyone else. She has the mindset, so all I can do is support her.
We do a lot of resistance band work for adding strength, stability and body control.
She is 9 and throws faster than the top level 11 year olds on the chart posted earlier. I will give her credit for a mature mental approach for her age.
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Few things...Curious what your thoughts are on why only 1 stayed a total stud.
Few things...
First she did not stop growing. She ended up just on 6' tall. I would say she was 5'5" or 5'6" in second year 10U.
Dad was 6'9" and Mom was 5'10" so there was that.4' 11" is 95th %tile for height for 10 year old girls (hell, 5' 6" is 75th % for full grown women), so that's gonna be a big help.
My DD is at about that same speed, her age is first year 10u. She is a bigger than average girl for her age, but not nearly as big as some of the girls we see. Currently trying to get her change-up as accurate as her fastball. I am constantly trying to figure out that line between letting her practice and pitch enough to let her be the best she can be, without overuse. Always see those posts on here about girls really good in 10u then just falling off a cliff after that. Right now she would pitch everyday.My DD is one of those you speak about. Finally getting her in regularly with a Rick Pauley instructor. Two in person lessons per month and 3-4 designed app based workouts per week.
The work is long and it takes determination to keep doing it. But she wants to and understands that to be better than everyone else, you have to outwork everyone else. She has the mindset, so all I can do is support her.
We do a lot of resistance band work for adding strength, stability and body control.
She is 9 and throws faster than the top level 11 year olds on the chart posted earlier. I will give her credit for a mature mental approach for her age.
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