Been there, it takes time.
It does. Things looks a lot different now.
Been there, it takes time.
The hands connected to the rear shoulder is the goal.Looking at some of the videos of Maddie it looks to me like connection between the hands and shoulders is really good. Maybe I don’t see the actively turning the barrel with the hands. I don’t understand the take the arms out of it and use the hands to turn. I am seeing the hands staying connected to the rear shoulder. The initial tilt of the shoulders looks to have the hands And arms pretty quiet.
The adjustment Maddie made to hit the change up is 100% on or with how I feel I adjusted when hitting offspeed. Front knee stays soft/bent and hands stay back - then boom.What I see is her sinking into the flex of the front leg, but not letting her head/weight get ahead of the rear hip or lose her scap pullback. Being able to maintain her position over the rear hip while waiting on the ball means she can still execute the swing mechanics that work best for her. When she allows her head/weight to get ahead of the rear hip at launch, things don't work well for her.
Yes I do. Depends on the age and their body awareness and strength How much I can teach. I would do it slowly and gently.Appreciate all the info Mike! Tons of good drills in those vids! Just curious but do you teach any low level players HLP? Just wondering how it translates for your average hitter.
It is a decent way of teaching my players sequence. As I have posted before, the phrase I use the most is, "point the knob and deliver the barrel." If you note the first facet of the 3 steps in the WGD, that is what is happening as well as the "go" position. I have my players check their opening hips and hands back. At times, I might ask them if they were in that position where others might ask them if they were, "walking away from their hands." The second part of that drill we focus on the hands very slowly "coming off of the merry go round" and then the wrist action. My hitters are also asked to take note of what their lower body is doing. Then, the final part of that drill is to hit the ball attempting to "get it all right." It was a drill that my daughter did and she would do it on her own to try to figure out what her body was doing in the swing. In fact, she spent a lot of time doing it and really believed in the drill.Hey CB,
I was wondering why you used this drill so much?
The adjustment Maddie made to hit the change up is 100% on or with how I feel I adjusted when hitting offspeed. Front knee stays soft/bent and hands stay back - then boom.
Is Bregman TTB here? Is Altuve? They both look like they are; just not so far behind them.