- Aug 21, 2008
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Ken, my mistake... I should've been more clear. The "arm touching the stomach" is an exaggeration. A lot of what I teach is exaggerations because I run into girls who have dreadful habits caused by the HE mechanics of other coaches. So, to exaggerate it, I have them get their arm through the hips by telling them to brush their belly. Due to the natural twists and turns that the body does when throwing, it's nearly impossible to touch the arm to the belly (unless the pitcher stays completely open the entire time, which i absolutely disagree with). But, in my experience the phrase "touch your arm to your belly" seems to click with kids to get the ball ahead of the hips. Personally I think telling them to tuck their elbow, etc is too technical and I'm all about the simplicity of it. Once they get the hang of being open long enough for the arm to clear through and the natural motion of the arm movement, the elbow will tuck itself in. I would bet my house that nobody told any of those pictured pitchers to tuck their elbows. They figured it out with their mechanics.
I think MOST pc's agree that the hips need to close, the question is WHEN do you close them. I believe the hip should push the ball through and close after. Staying open the ENTIRE time is losing the power of hips IMHO. Imagine a baseball pitcher from the stretch position who didn't rotate his body upon throwing the ball... staying sideways the entire time. He wouldn't get much, if any, power.
So, I hope that clarifies what was intended.
Bill
I think MOST pc's agree that the hips need to close, the question is WHEN do you close them. I believe the hip should push the ball through and close after. Staying open the ENTIRE time is losing the power of hips IMHO. Imagine a baseball pitcher from the stretch position who didn't rotate his body upon throwing the ball... staying sideways the entire time. He wouldn't get much, if any, power.
So, I hope that clarifies what was intended.
Bill