- Nov 29, 2014
- 2
- 1
Any lifts that a pitcher should not do? Using this at home time to get stronger, curious about what not to do in order to prevent injury
What's hard to figure is how much velo she would have gained naturally by the normal maturing process over 2 years. Hard to say really. It's all just a guess.We took DD to a personal trainer a little over 2 years ago. Her trainer works only with female athletes and has worked with several D1 and D2 pitchers.
She focues on heavy lifting with compound exercises, squats, deadlifts, clean and jerk. She also mixes in other more specialized exercises for pitchers including bench press. Now you will hear on here how terribly awful bench and over head presses are for pitchers. I thought that was true too until DDs trainer proved to me that in moderation they are very good exercises. DD is smaller framed and has added a ton of strength and overall velocity has increased. She was consistently at 57-58 at 15 years old.. shes about to hit her 17th birthday and was clocked by an independent trainer at 62.8 a few weeks back. That's the hardest she's thrown and I attribute her gains to strength training including over head presses and bench presses.
What's hard to figure is how much velo she would have gained naturally by the normal maturing process over 2 years. Hard to say really. It's all just a guess.
DD complains about snatches. Seems like throwing on days with snatches is a bad idea.15- Currently doing (Hang Snatch, Overhead Squat and Snatch Balance) as warm up
Hang Clean, Bent Over Row, Lunge, Squat, RLE Split Squat, Bench, RDL on Monday's Wednesday's and Friday's
Wasserman Young Blood conditioning program. Yes, I've suggested this before. No, I don't have any connection to Austin. Yes, we use it and it works. Good up to ages 13, maybe 14. Yes, we augment these drills with additional core and forearm work and Pauly's speed drills. And, yes, it makes a difference.