You might be getting more frustrated than her. I remember rdbass going through this. I will tell you my approach. I worked only with 18u and college girls in the US, but in Europe on occasion I am asked to do clinics for younger kids because coaching is scarce, and the coaches need to learn. So I typically do what I did in the US, and have each coach bring a max of 3-4 girls including a pitcher/catcher depending on space. I teach simple hitting skills appropriate to that age group. You can't teach this type of swing to an 8 year old.
As kids grow, and mature physically, they start to develop body awareness; or bio-mechanical awareness. If you daughter swings, can she tell you what her back foot did? At some age level they will be able to tell you. They will be able not only to fix what they can see, but what they can't see. This typically happens around 16-18 years of age. Tall lanky girls often take a year or two more. The same holds for pitching. Sometimes these girls can throw harder and some say they are relying too much on their fastball. Well perhaps so, but also they also might be behind in their capacity to develop those other pitches do to that physical awareness.
I think you should consider who is helping whom, and if you are frustrated, take a break. If she gets frustrated, take a break. It is better to practice 10 times correctly than 100 times half-way to put it politely, as they say. Now I am gong to go back and look up her age and edit this probably
ok, so I get the feeling she is at least 15. There are some good suggestions here, and one I never thought of that is really good! The bare-foot toe touch. I wouldn't do it on live hitting, just a "motion" drill, but a great idea. The bucket drill is great. But make sure she touches with force, push-back, at toe-touch, and the heel is up. I never teach a kid to keep the front foot at 90 degrees because it torques the knee and honestly can cause stress or injury. It should come down at 45 degrees. I am not sure what everyone is implying, because like me, my typing makes sense in my own head and may seem like Russian to someone else. Da Svedanya!
As kids grow, and mature physically, they start to develop body awareness; or bio-mechanical awareness. If you daughter swings, can she tell you what her back foot did? At some age level they will be able to tell you. They will be able not only to fix what they can see, but what they can't see. This typically happens around 16-18 years of age. Tall lanky girls often take a year or two more. The same holds for pitching. Sometimes these girls can throw harder and some say they are relying too much on their fastball. Well perhaps so, but also they also might be behind in their capacity to develop those other pitches do to that physical awareness.
I think you should consider who is helping whom, and if you are frustrated, take a break. If she gets frustrated, take a break. It is better to practice 10 times correctly than 100 times half-way to put it politely, as they say. Now I am gong to go back and look up her age and edit this probably
ok, so I get the feeling she is at least 15. There are some good suggestions here, and one I never thought of that is really good! The bare-foot toe touch. I wouldn't do it on live hitting, just a "motion" drill, but a great idea. The bucket drill is great. But make sure she touches with force, push-back, at toe-touch, and the heel is up. I never teach a kid to keep the front foot at 90 degrees because it torques the knee and honestly can cause stress or injury. It should come down at 45 degrees. I am not sure what everyone is implying, because like me, my typing makes sense in my own head and may seem like Russian to someone else. Da Svedanya!
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