Donny Buster's "Total Presentation" - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Donny Buster's "Total Presentation"

Description:

Hitting Mechanics – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:958
Slides: 166
Provided by: FiveFrameSwing
Tags:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Donny Buster's "Total Presentation"


1
Preface
  • The Hanson Principle. ( one to use)
  • Always compare what anybody tells you about the
    swing to slow motion clips of the best hitters in
    the world.
  • - - Mark Hanson
  • Hope you will take the time to study and
    understandenjoy!

2
THE SWING
  • Every great swing is the right combination of
    weight shift and rotation that stores elastic
    energy and suddenly releases it. There are no
    exceptions to this rule.
  • SwingBuster Sports makes products that help
    hitters and coaches training hitters to apply
    these forces in the right proportions and
    seamlessly integrate them into an efficient
    athletic move.

3
Timing and Adjustability
  • If pitchers threw the exact same speed on every
    pitch the mechanics of the great hitters would be
    very different.
  • This is what happens at the All Star Home Run
    Derby every year yielding quite a show.
  • Momentum rules at the Home Run Derby but takes a
    back seat when the real game starts.

4
Forces That Batters Use
  • Muscle contraction pure strength helps but can
    get trumped by superior mechanics.
  • Stretch and fire the energy stored in the
    torqued torso is the key to adjustability.
  • Momentum cannot be delayed or conserved by
    itself and is less useful against great pitching.

5
What Great Pitchers Do
  • Pitchers are great users of MOMENTUM. They want
    to create it, conserve it through the kinetic
    chain, and use it to throw very hard.
  • There is no interruption of the flow from windup
    to delivery in pitching and no need to adjust
    pause, capture and hold stretch.
  • The best pitchers can throw different speeds from
    similar motions taking the batters ability to use
    their momentum away.

6
When is Momentum Important
  • Javelin
  • Crow hop
  • Pitching
  • Amps up in HR derbies
  • MLB hitters that can recognize the pitch speed
    and quality the earliest can utilize momentum
    best.

7
Momentum Has Its Limits
  • A car going down the road that lets off the gas
    still has considerable force called momentum.
  • Momentum rules in the Home Run Derby but has less
    application the following night when the All Star
    game actually starts. Why?
  • Great pitchers are not going to allow you to use
    it at the same level.
  • What can replace momentum forces and still create
    power?

8
Stretch and Fire
  • The major muscle groups that can create and store
    energy are the muscles of the truck and torso
    that can twist and untwist like a rubber band.
  • In order to be an effective hitter, one must
    learn to stretch the rubber band and release it
    on the ball.
  • The action must have power and produce a wide
    timing window to handle the pitchers deceptions
    concerning speed.

9
Momentum vs. Stretch and Fire
  • Momentum suggest that you start a motion that is
    not interrupted and its motion has a force. You
    cannot hit the pause button on this force and
    reintroduce it later.
  • Stretch can HOLD energy and pause it and release
    or fire it at the correct time.
  • Hitters that stay in the game rely on this
    stretch and fire power source as it can hit all
    pitch speeds.

10
When is Stretch and Fire Important
  • Stretch is important even in youth ball as very
    young pitchers learn that most hitters want to
    use too much momentum and do not know how to
    create stretch and fire power production.
  • Momentum is intuitive but stretch and fire
    usually must be taught.

11
Why the Hands Back Hitter
  • Learning stretch and fire mechanics.
  • Loading the torso and firing the mechanism.
  • Taking away momentum for a while to learn how to
    create torque in the midsection to allow greater
    adjustability to pitch speeds.

12
The Hands Back Hitter
13
The Hands Back Hitter
  • The Hands Back Hitter Pro is the premier trainer
    to teach hitters how to keep the shoulders loaded
    until the foot plants.
  • When the shoulders stay back as the stride foot
    opens torque is created.
  • Training with the HBH is a vital step to learning
    rotary power.

14
How it Works
  • The Hands Back Hitter is cocked and a ball placed
    on the popper tube.
  • The batter sets up about 3-4 inches from the
    trigger string.
  • The focus is on maintaining slightly closed
    shoulders and cocked hands until the front foot
    gets down at a 45 degree angle.
  • The ball is popped into the perfect location and
    the batter is in the perfect torque position to
    use his torso stretch to release the energy as
    rotary power.
  • By removing momentum, the player can learn to
    access rotary power from the hips that moves
    quickly up the chain and levers to the bat barrel
    in a flash.
  • It is human nature from throwing to use too much
    forward momentum in hitting during the formative
    years.
  • This drill station can instill confidence in the
    power of rotational swings.

15
Getting To the Core
  • In order to begin the process of discovery one
    must ask the question Where does the power come
    from?
  • We can always look to golf for some answers as
    it has volumes of swing studies with supporting
    data complied by analysis of 100s of
    professionals. The famous X factor study removed
    all doubt about the power source.
  • This study showed that the power comes from the
    ability to find the optimal separation between
    the upper and lower body . In other words, how
    can we dynamically bring the shoulder line in as
    the hips line begins to open and stretch the
    middle (torso) like a rubber band.

16
The Goal
  • It is important to understand where your going
    before you start any journey. The goal and
    destination is now clear. We must learn to work
    the top half against the bottom half to prime the
    middle. The middle doesnt exist in sports until
    the X angle is created and stretched creating X
    factor stretch in the muscles of the torso.
  • We must learn proper weight shift to stay in
    balance through contact.

17
More on X Factor
  • This ground breaking study showed that the
    players that hit golf balls the longest had the
    greatest hip/shoulder separation at the top of
    the back swing just before approach to the ball.
  • If you stood above the player and looked down the
    shoulder line would cross the hip line forming an
    X. Hence the name X angle.
  • More importantly, they went on in subsequent
    studies to show that the really best players
    created their X angle and stretched it the most
    before approach. So X factor stretch replaced X
    factor as king.
  • This study proved that dynamically created
    elastic energy in the midsection drives the power
    mechanism and optimizes adjustability.

18
Fixing the Swing
  • CORE Swing flaws take three basic forms.
  • Failure to rotate properly.
  • Shifting too much weight.
  • Not shifting enough weight.

19
Weight coiled into back hip. Weight coils back
and should not slide back outside the ball of the
back foot.
20
The weight should shift head over belt buckle
to thenew center balance center.
21
Rotary Power
  • Rotation is generated by the batter working the
    shoulders against the hips to torque the body and
    create a circular pattern of force around the
    body.
  • This is a horizontal connection.
  • The Hands Back Hitter works to teach the batter
    how to get the front foot down early enough to
    turn into the path of the ball.
  • The forces of angular acceleration are
    exponentially higher than straight line forces.

22
Shifting to Much Weight
  • This swing flaw is commonly called lunging.
  • Lunging is failure to control forward momentum
    and block it and convert that force to rotational
    energy.
  • While we do not want the batter to literally
    stay back the Stayback Tee helps correct these
    batters that begin with a straight line push to
    the pitcher that doesnt get blocked and turned
    to rotation.

23
Lunging..rear leg and rear leg extension
24
Rear Elbow / Rear Leg Extension
  • In linear hitting you will see the batter push
    toward the ball. The rear leg will get longer
    (extend) taking the batter closer to the pitcher
    with the head moving forward into contact.
  • At the same time the rear elbow will get long
    also extending to the ball as apposed to slotting
    ( staying bent and tight to the batters side) in
    a rotational hitter.

25
Stopping the Lunge
  • Lunging batters have no negative loading moves.
  • Coiling the hips and triggering the hands as the
    weight is carried forward in the stride helps
    stop lunging.
  • Hitters with no negative loading moves will
    lunge.
  • I have never seen a kid that had hip coil and a
    good upper body loading pattern that lunged.

26
The Stayback Tee
27
Why the Infini-Tee
  • Weight shift and application of the momentum
    after the stretch and fire mechanics are in
    place.
  • The stage 2 tee to learn to take the pitchers
    pitch away.
  • Teach low ball power mechanics and to practice
    the difficult pitch locations.
  • Eliminate the standard batting tee that causes
    top hand roll over.

28
The Infini-TEE - The low ball diagonal plane
tee.
29
The Infini-TEE
30
Loading the weight into back hip as the front
heel releases
31
Barrel outside helmet as the hips coil and start
to carry the weight forward on the stride
32
The barrel returns to plane just before the front
foot blocks
33
Loading the back side by releasing the lead heel
and coiling as you prepare to carry the coil in
the stride. Keeping the barrel loaded outside the
helmet during the early stride.
34
The Infini-TEE. The barrel is returning to plane
and in this case the diagonal plane of the low
ball location.
35
Driving the Low Ball on the Diagonal Swing Plane
requires taking the hinge angle forward ahead of
the ball and hitting the inside seam.
36
Creating X factor- See Shoulder line closed and
hip line open
37
Segmentation X factor
  • Segmentation is breaking the body segments apart
    so they can have a range of motion independent of
    each other.
  • Segmentation can occur from upper half resistance
    as the bottom half turns.
  • Segmentation can occur as the upper body loading
    action breaks the shoulders from the hips at the
    first trigger move.
  • The more vertical barrel slot and the BHUT
    loading trigger move can counter rotate the
    barrel in an opposite direction from the
    direction the hips will turn.
  • While it requires timing, this mechanism can
    really produce a segmented swing with a whip
    action vs. a batter trying to turn the shoulder
    unit fast to generate power.
  • Segmentation creates spatially very early bat
    speed as seen on slow motion as the bat blurring
    behind the batter in the backside of the swing
    arc.

38
The Set Up
  • Sorry, but we must digress to some fundamentals.
    We must get the body in the proper position.
    There is no time limit on this as you enter the
    batters box.
  • You can solve many swing flaws by improving the
    set up before the ball is pitched.
  • We will use
  • 1. Grip
  • 2. Bat position (slot)
  • 3. Posture
  • 4. Line of Direction (L.O.D)

39
Grip
  • We do not use the knuckle as grip guides. We use
    the wrist angles and the knuckles take care of
    themselves. The bottom hand thumb bends to the
    lead elbow. The top hand knuckles bend to the top
    arm elbow.
  • Another thought is to find the barrel slot and
    apply the hands comfortably to that bat position.

40
Top hand grip knuckles should bend back to elbow
41
Bottom wrist bends thumb to elbow
42
The Rotation Center Between the Hands
  • Knob to the ball cues can make the player fail to
    understand that there is a rotation center on the
    bat handle between the hands. The hand, arm,
    elbow action serves to rotate the barrel into the
    ball with the palm up / palm down flat hand.
  • Only but activating this center in concert with
    the turning core can the batter get the barrel
    out into the hitting zone.
  • Getting the barrel out is called angular
    displacement .

43
The Top Hand
  • While the bottom hand is thought to be the
    dominant hand in the connected rotary move, it is
    interesting that top hand action might have more
    control over the proper launch.
  • The top hand is an important palm up power source
    at contact helping apply great power to the swing
    after the shoulder turn has almost been deleted.
  • The top hand can get whipped on the ball on
    away locations and learning the proper action of
    the top hand is essential for total power
    production and hitting backside.
  • The top hand is NOT just along for the ride but
    the top hand doesnt pull forward to the ball
    initially.

44
The Pronated Top Hand
  • Pronation is a term meaning palm forward and
    inclined downward. Baseball people call it having
    the top hand palm facing the pitcher.
  • The pronated top hand cannot go forward at swing
    initiation it can only rotate the barrel
    backwards as the rear elbow slots.
  • Many great hitters pronate the top hand during
    the stride / load.
  • Interestingly, this is the same top hand position
    a second baseman holds the ball just as he turns
    toward first to turn the double play.
  • What is the next move of the top hand from this
    position as the hips open..BACK . That can be a
    natural move in the swing as well.

45
Palm facing pitcher and downward is pronation. A
pronated top hand cannot go forward it can only
turn palm up rotating the barrel at swing
initiation.
46
The top hand goes from the pronated (facing the
pitcher) to palm up when the rear elbow slots.
This accelerated the barrels.
47
The Bottom Hand
  • The bottom hand should start almost vertical with
    the thumb side almost up.
  • When the lead elbow goes up seeking the plane of
    the pitch the bottom hand palm goes palm down.
  • This propels the barrel backwards into the back
    side of the swing arc rapidly.
  • A small hand turn yields a big barrel move.
  • Mentally extend that thumb up 33 inches and
    imagine how far the barrel accelerated as the
    hand turn to flat.

48
Lead elbow down and thumb UP
49
Palm flat
50
Posture
  • Good posture has an amazing effect on the swing.
    The athletic stance often described for
    basketball and football, has the chest out and
    the rear out setting a spine angle that connects
    the upper and lower body. Any deviation from
    this optimum position at GO! will cause a weak
    connection and bleed off power. The bend in the
    knees and the straight back with the correct
    spine angle is essential to making a positive
    physical movement .

51
Bad Posture..bend at shoulder blades and hips
tucked
52
Better posture creates a good spine angle, the
bat is in the vertical slot and the hands set
is BHUT (bottom hand under the top)
53
Line of Direction
  • Wow!..... What an important subject. Failure to
    find the correct line of direction of the feet on
    each swing is the reason the average golfer
    cannot break 90. It has the same profound effect
    in baseball. The correct line of direction
    (target line) has the feet on a line to the
    throwing arm of the pitcher. All coiling and
    loading action must occur AGAINST this line of
    direction or the core move and power source will
    break down.

54
The L.O.D in Baseball
  • The batter should come to the box and place the
    back foot square to the plate.
  • Look at the pitchers throwing arm with the head
    square to the release window and THEN set the
    front foot.
  • Shoulders should be in line with the LOD of the
    feet and not counter rotated in the set up as
    that limits vision.
  • Only when the lower body is in position, should
    the hands put the bat into the slot.

55
How to find the LOD?
  • My good friend has won our State Am Golf twice.
    We occasionally play and I asked how he was in
    perfect alignment on every shot. He said
    two-eye contact on the target.
  • What? I place my back foot and look at the target
    with both eyes equidistant to the target ( head
    square) and THEN place my lead foot down.
  • The feet stabilize the lower spine and the head
    position stabilizes the upper spine.
  • The coiling / loading occurs within their
    parameters
  • The common set up flaw is always the same. The
    players LOD is almost always right of target
    or closed stances.

56
Effects of Bat Slots
  • It is important to understand that the positional
    slot of the bat barrel as the weight is shifting
    will determine, in part, the nature and power of
    the swing.
  • The higher (more vertical) the barrel slot and
    longer the barrel is maintained out of plane
    the more segmentation and X factor the batter
    will have.
  • The higher bat slots yield better low ball plate
    coverage and better upward adjustability.
  • The higher barrel is more on plane for the lower
    pitches.

57
How Do Bat Slots Effect The Swing?
  • The bat slot will effect the X- factor stretch.
  • How is that possible? The barrel is placed or
    loaded into a position that allows the hips to
    get ahead of the hands without conscience thought
    of that.
  • No batter can take the bat directly to the ball
    with the barrel out of plane as the stride
    begins.
  • So, sometime during stride and before foot plant,
    the barrel will transition back toward the 45
    slot behind the helmet .
  • With the barrel more vertical, the hands cannot
    move but in one direction when the batter starts
    and that is BACK.
  • All barrels launch from close to the same
    placenear the back shoulder with the barrel
    coming back toward the 45 slot. So why would you
    want to start out of plane? It is a mechanism
    to make the hands go back as the stride is
    underway and the hips are rotating opposite into
    foot plant. The load and the unload overlap
    increasing the X factor.
  • You can enter the swing plane with the barrel
    above it effortlessly but you cannot raise the
    barrel on the way to foot plant to find the
    plane. A flat bat in the set up is powerless
    against a low pitch.
  • Taking the hands back as the hips open is not a
    natural move for most players so barrel position
    / hand set can make it an automatic.

58
Bat Position (Slot)
  • There are several bat slots seen in MLB player.
  • 1. 45 slot is the barrel half way between the
    shoulder and the helmet with the barrel behind
    the player.
  • 2. The 90 slot is a vertical slot with the barrel
    pointing to the sky. This is called a weightless
    bat as there is no downward pull force on the
    hands.
  • 3. The helmet splitting slot is seen to bisect
    the helmet from the catchers view.
  • 4. The tipped slot (minus 15 slot) has the
    barrel outside the helmet and pointed to the
    pitcher or to the oppo gap. Sheffield and Julio
    Frank would be examples.
  • 5. The moving slot is a player starting in the
    45 slot, moving the barrel to vertical or beyond
    during the hip coil and having the barrel enter
    the swing plane as the barrel transitions back
    near the rear shoulder.

59
O slot
60
45 slot
61
Helmet splitting slot
62
90 slot
63
Weightless bat. As the barrel gets higher or more
vertical it is said to be weightless. That
means it is not pulling on the hands and wrist.
While it doesnt appear to be a fast position, it
increases speed through widening the torque angle
getting the hips to turn to completion before the
hands unhinge creating a whip action. This barrel
position helps batters struggling with upper body
dominance.
64
Slots for Tots
  • The LL hitter age 7-12 will face some loopy
    pitches. These high arc pitches can cross the
    chest high making weight transfer difficult.
    Since weight transfer can be taken out of the
    equation on certain pitches, the batter is forced
    to hit off the back foot in certain pitch
    locations. The upper body mechanics are very
    important in this age group.
  • The 45 slot seems to get on plane with the big
    arc ball. The hinge angle must be formed and
    maintained until the foot gets down.
  • The LL player will often be forced to bend the
    back knee while considerable weight is still back
    there to get on plane with the loopy pitch.

65
The U Method of Upper Body Positioning for Kids
  • The U is a line drawn from the point of the lead
    shoulder, down the lead arm, across the forearm,
    and back up the barrel.
  • One option for group teaching LL players is to
    form the U and then rock the shoulder unit back
    (rock the U) until the tip of the lead elbow is
    behind the belly button.
  • This is a position the kids can see easily and
    remember and is a reliable preloaded upper body.
  • Teaching them to cock the hands, maintain the U
    and rock the U to a point behind the belly button
    is important.
  • Staying in this preloaded position until the lead
    toe touches will insure some good pop no matter
    where the weight goes to get on plane with the
    very large strike zone and the loopy pitch.

66
You can form the U in the waiting period and
rock the U in the preload (see next slide)
67
Good set up for Kids / Bat Slots for Tots. The
barrel is splitting the helmet or more behind the
body. It is best suited for young players less
likely to have a optimal loading pattern in a
real game.
68
Tip of Lead Elbow at Foot Plant
  • There are three basic places you will find the
    lead elbow at foot plant.
  • 1. Barred out long on the first movebad.
  • 2. Bent to 90 degrees but still over the lead
    pants pocket..this very bad.
  • 3. Bent to 90 degrees and behind the belly
    button. Of the three, this is the optimal
    starting position at launch for the hitter.

69
Loaded Shoulders to Foot Plant
  • An absolute for all hitters is you must create
    and maintain a loaded upper body until your foot
    gets down. If the swing begins at lead heel drop
    or as Ben Hogan said about golf the turning left
    of the hips, then the upper body must have its
    levers in position to use the energy generated in
    the lower body.
  • So it is a worthy goal for the LL hitter to
    simply make sure the upper body is in the optimal
    position at toe touch.
  • Hitters that fail to get OR keep the hands cocked
    and the lead elbow behind the belly button to
    foot plant cannot hit very well.

70
The One Plane Swing
  • A one plane swing starts the barrel in the 45
    slot and launches the barrel in the 45 slot. The
    barrel stays in the momentum plane of the
    shoulder turn as the shoulders load and as the
    swing is executed.
  • Examples are John Olerud and Joe Mauer

71
The Two Plane Swing
  • The two plane swing involves loading the barrel
    into a plane that it cannot be swung from while
    the weight shift begins. It creates a method that
    will eventually brings the front shoulder in to
    the ball in perfect time with the hip rotating
    out.
  • The two planer brings the barrel back into the
    launch slot just before foot plant (about 4
    average). The return to slot of the barrel at the
    back shoulder brings the front side in
  • This forces an overlap between the shoulders
    loading back and the hips unloading forward. It
    maximizes X factor stretch and it more
    importantly maximizes it at precisely the correct
    time to capture and use the force.
  • It is a trigger mechanism to increase torque
    exhibited by many HOF hitters like Aaron, Bonds,
    Williams, and others like Puckett Bo Jackson and
    Piazza.
  • In golf, it is used by Raymond Floyd, Fred
    Couples, and Lee Trevino.
  • It is interesting that the ball will go in the
    direction that the barrel is pointed. i.e. Julio
    Franko points the barrel to right field and he is
    a RF homerun threat.

72
The Gear Effect
  • On this next slide the batter will turn his
    bottom hand under the top. Basically, you could
    say that he is counter rotating the handle in his
    hands AWAY from the direction that he must rotate
    it to go to the ball.
  • What happens next is pretty amazing. The barrel
    will get a running start back into the back side
    of the swing arc.
  • The hands are the active part of this negative
    set up move and start an interesting chain
    reaction.
  • The hands are tipping the barrel forward as the
    stride begins. They begin to rotate back on plane
    as the elbow positions reverse. The high rear
    elbow comes down to the slot and the low lead
    elbow goes up.
  • This applies leverage to the barrel rotation
    getting the barrel really accelerating behind the
    batter.
  • The hip rotation that primes the torso starts
    turning the shoulders which levers the elbow
    action which levers the forces turning the barrel
    in the hands.
  • The kinetic chain acts like the gears on a bike
    to AMP the rotation to levels unattainable
    through any other method.

73
Two Plane Swing. Barrel loads in one plane during
stride and swings and another.
74
The Secondary Adjustment
  • Great hitters load the upper body the same on
    each pitch.
  • Great hitters stride to a balanced position.
  • On many occasions the batter must abandon the
    core orbit and make late arm and hand adjustments
    to breaking balls and off speed.
  • Priming of the forearms and proper loading
    patterns can facilitate this ability to stay
    alive on great pitches.
  • The two plane swing seems to have an advantage
    when it comes to making the better secondary
    adjustments.

75
Weight Shift
  • Balance in a player with the arms outstretched to
    either side would be at the line that bisects the
    pants zipper.
  • When you put both hands to the back side and then
    add the weight of a bat back their where is the
    new center of gravity? It moves to a location
    nearer the front inner thigh.
  • What happens when you do the above and then pull
    on the bat that has mass and inertia (resistance
    to movement)? You are more out of balance
    backwards and you have no lead shoulder leverage.
  • The new balance center at swing initiation is
    no longer the zipper. It is somewhere forward of
    that original point.
  • So the weight must shift to the new balance
    center to be in balance at launch.
  • Somebody once said, There is a button on the
    ground in front of every batter. How and when the
    batter steps on that button has a lot to do with
    the quality of the swing.
  • Another great cue for weight shift is move the
    release point more out front or take the knob
    out in front of your lead pocket before to
    release it.

76
Head Over Belt Buckle
  • The body axis must be maintained to near vertical
    during the shift. The axis can only be maintained
    if the head moves directly over the belt buckle
    during the stride or shift .
  • If the front foot moves out and the head stays
    back the batter will be out of balance to the
    back.
  • If the back knee hinges with weight still on the
    back foot then the batter is falling backwards as
    he is swinging forward..reverse pivoting.
  • More weight is coiled into the back hip as the
    pitcher is releasing.
  • The weight is shifting (moving the C.O.G) as the
    ball is just out of the hand.
  • The front foot blocks the weight as the ball is
    about half way home.
  • At contact, more weight is against the front side
    and the momentum has been used to optimize the
    rotary power. This was made possible by
    establishing the optimal balance point forward
    from where the batter began the loading move.
  • John Daley said start on the back and finish
    against the front ..easier said that understood.

77
Head over belt buckle shift
78
Head over belly button weight shift
79
The Stride
  • To move the center of gravity (and it must be
    moved) there must be some forward linear
    motionfact!
  • Some players start wide and shift the center of
    gravity (COG) before launch and do not move the
    front foot (Pujols).
  • Most players move the COG by shifting the body
    AND by moving the front foot.
  • Make no mistake of this factfailure to move the
    COG before launch is a huge swing flaw.
  • And yesBonds does move forward albeit well
    disguised.

80
Back Foot Action in Weight Shift
  • The back foot will break from the ground
    initially evenly across the side of the sole of
    the shoe.
  • The heel will lead the toe at the push.
  • The toe will drag from the hip turning around the
    lead hip releasing the back side. The back side
    is nearly weightless at contact.
  • The establishment of the new center of gravity
    and the turning of the hips to completion will
    release and passively drag the rear toe in many
    players.
  • Again, we can look to golf for clues here. Golf
    Digest has illustrated this many times.
  • This is a sign of good momentum transfer and
    should not be confused with lunging.

81
Back Foot Parallel
82
Back foot sole part as weigh first shifts
83
Back foot push forward showing heel leading toe
84
Back foot goes heel to sky, laces to pitcher and
can drag with hip rotation.
85
Front Foot Action in Weight Shift
  • The front foot can be a no teach. I have stood
    behind many players and asked them to start their
    stride and unexpectedly pushed them from behind.
  • 100 of them land with the lead foot at
    45degrees.
  • The front side knows how to accept weight in a
    balanced position and needs to accept weight over
    a bent knee to become the lower body trigger.
  • The upper body loads the same every pitch. The
    front foot becomes the trigger to adjust the body
    to the ball in different pitch locations.
  • If you coil the hips as you stride you will
    naturally uncoil properly into front foot plant.

86
Tipped Bat Slot / Vertical Hand set
  • See the front foot open 45 degrees and the lead
    knee fanning as the barrel goes from the vertical
    plane back to the launch slot.

87
Reaching out with the front foot with all the
weight back can be over done and result in back
foot hitting or dead front foot hitting. This
will certainly lead to bug squishing.
88
Watch back foot action in an improper bug squish
swing
89
Reverse Pivot.. heel swivels behind starting line
on floor..Poor weight shift
90
Anti- Squish Drill
  • Players that fail to shift weight have their back
    heel pivot backwards and stay flat to the ground
    during the swing. The heel will end up closer to
    the catcher after the swing is completed.
  • The drill creates instant feedback to bug
    squishing.
  • We place a batting helmet behind the players
    foot.
  • If he rotates his hips with no weight transfer
    then the spinning heel will knock the helmet
    backwards.
  • With proper weight shift the rear heel is never
    closer to the catcher after the swing.

91
Inside Seam Drill with the Infini-TEE. The inside
seam is the batters aiming point. Attempts to
hit the inside seam aid in rear elbow slotting
and usually result in the ball contacted in the
center.
92
The upper half position at GO!. The release
mechanism of the upper body involves the rear
elbow slotting as the lead elbow juts upward
putting the hands flat. The lead leg blocks
weight and extends away from the pitcher.
93
Inside Seam Drill - Keeping the feet lined up
back to the throwing arm makes the player load
against the proper line of direction.
Approaching the ball to the inside seam forces
the rear elbow to stay against the rear hip and
makes the lead arm the connected arm to the core
rotation. Aiming at the inside seam with the
shoulders rotating down through the ball yield
incredible power not attainable on standard tees.
94
The Hinge Angle
  • The angle created between the bat and the lead
    forearm is called the hinge angle.
  • The most common swing flaw in youth hitters is
    failure to form and maintain the hinge angle to
    front foot plant.
  • Taking the the hinge angle near the lead pocket
    with the bat in the lag position creates power.
  • Moving the hinge angle such that it is maintained
    and released out front is a great weight shift
    cue.

95
Weight shift helps to get inside the ball. It is
difficult to get inside the ball without proper
weight shift. The downward gaze at the back of
the balls gives the batter the sense of going
down to the ball in the diagonal plane and
leading the hands in front of the ball location.
Line drives are hit well in this low ball
position.
96
The batter is releasing the hinge angle on inside
seam. The tee will tilt forward to work on
getting off the back side for hitting balls down
and behind runners or the tee will tilt back if
you want to release the barrel on the up side for
long ball trajectory.
97
Knob to the Ball
  • The knob can go to the ball but we must define
    the ball location. Is the knob going toward the
    pitcher or toward the plate? That is an
    important distinction to make.
  • Taking the knob to the pitcher usually involves
    pulling both hands forward at swing initiation.
    This linear hand path doesnt interface with
    turning hips well.
  • Taking the knob to the opposite batters box or
    knob to the plate is a more rotational or
    circular hand path that does interface with
    turning hips best.
  • Knob to the pitcher is a pull field move and knob
    to the plate yields the best plate coverage to
    all fields because the hip turn can reposition
    the release point.
  • In the best swings, the knob is going away from
    the players belly button on approach.
  • The upper body loading move should be the same
    against every pitch and should be occurring
    before the pitch location is determined.
  • Taking the knob past the lead pants pocket is a
    great weight shift cue to get players off the
    back side or release the back side.
  • Players that start the knob to the plate can
    rotate this body and turn on the inside pitch
    for an inside adjustment.
  • It is better to set the posture and upper body
    loading for the down and away pitch and adjust up
    and in.

98
Maintaining the hinge angle and shaft to shoulder
position. Working on the pitchers pitch
location a couple of balls out of center and
down. Driving that ball back through box or right
of pitcher.
99
Hitting vs. Pitching
  • Pitchers coil their hips, shift their weight, and
    have their hands going back as they land on a
    forward new balance center.
  • By doing this they segment the body.
  • Hitters make an identical move. If a batter can
    throw in a segmented whip then the batter can hit
    in a segmented whip.

100
The Bonds Hitch
  • Barry does a few things people should understand.
  • He has two mechanisms that increases his body
    segmentation, increases his torque, provides his
    barrel and his hips a running start, and allows
    him to have tremendous speed quickness and bat
    speed.
  • He drops the entire box (hands and arms) and tips
    the barrel to the opposite field gap AS he shifts
    his center of gravity. He cannot load the
    shoulders until the box is raised and his hands
    return to plane. By this time the hips are
    already opening.
  • This overlap gets him to a very powerful launch
    position with the ability to rotate on any pitch
    location and drive the ball out of the park.

101
Bonds drops the box in a downward hitch.
102
Bonds exaggerates the tip to the opposite field
gap as the box is down. Film clips will surprise
you showing the number of Hall Of Fame hitters
that tip the barrel to the opposite field during
their hip coil / stride to delay the shoulder
turn back.
103
Bonds hitch allows the barrel to return to the
launch slot allowing the hips to get ahead of
hands. Getting the hands to go back as the hips
rotate open creates great power possible due to
hip and shoulder plane separation.
104
Casting
  • Casting is releasing the hinge angle early
    creating a long angle before the barrel gets into
    the hitting zone.
  • Casting is common in batters that have poor
    weight shift.
  • Maintaining the bat to forearm angle around 90
    degrees to just before release is essential.

105
Casting is losing the hinge angle early
106
Wrapping
  • Wrapping the bat is breaking the hinge angle down
    to an acute angle early usually during the load.
    Wrapping is often happening in conjunction with
    getting the barrel too far around the body to
    recover or too deep in the neck slot creating a
    wrapped and trapped bat weakening the kinetic
    chain.

107
Wrapping deep in the neck slot. This is an area
that the bat can get trapped whereby the hitter
cannot get back to the ball. Note the flat hands.
The lead shoulder has a strong tendency to pull
of the ball or take a hard turn left from this
position. Batters with this set up often just
stare at the low and away strike as they know
they cannot pull the trigger out there.


108
The Top Hand Drill
  • The top hand drill should be executed with a
    vertical barrel or tipped barrel and a pronated
    top hand.
  • The goal of the drill is to reveal to the player
    the fact that the top hand accelerated the barrel
    back into the backside of the swing arc toward
    the catcher vs. pulling forward with the bottom
    hand.
  • If both hand pull forward the rotation center
    between the hands is not accessed.

109
Top hand drill with pronated top hand. Properly
done the barrel should point to the opposite
field gap.
110
Top hand returning to plane to the launch slot
111
Top hand drill getting to the palm up position
112
Top hand drill getting to palm up impact
113
O degree slot - flat
114
Vertical weightless bat
115
Flattening bat into the 45 degree slot
116
Bottom Hand Drill
  • The one hand drills are most often misused and
    misunderstood.
  • These drills can be damaging to youth players
    with weak growth plates and should be done with
    very light bats and a padded target to decelerate
    the bat.
  • You cannot execute the bottom hand drill
    effectively with shifting to the new balance
    center.
  • Watch the starting barrel positions of the one
    hands drills. They should be done with emphasis
    on barrel rotation.
  • The barrel will go from past vertical to the
    diagonal plane.

117
Bottom hand drill starting position also note
bat tip direction for this drill.
118
Bottom hand turning palm down
119
Bottom hand supinates (turns palm down) and
releases
120
Bat Lag
  • Bat lag is a good thing as it describes the
    barrel lagging behind the hands.
  • It seems that the barrel will not catch up but
    when players learn to stay in the lag position
    longer they tend to have more barrel pop.
  • It is often used to described the position on
    approach where the barrel is coming parallel to
    the plate before the hinge angle is released.
  • Some call this shaft to shoulder barrel
    position as the barrel is seen close to the rear
    shoulder as the rotation of the body is under
    way.
  • If players are struggling with weight shift
    timing, then ask them to take the hinge angle to
    or past the lead pocket before release.

121
Staying above, inside, and hands ahead of the
ball in the barrel is in the LAG phase
122
Bat Drag
  • Bat Drag is considered a swing flaw. In bat
    drag, the player is pulling the top hand forward
    toward the pitched ball.
  • Great hitters rotate the barrel around the hands
    at swing initiation.
  • Pulling forward of the barrel with the top hand
    is a swing flaw.
  • The top hand should be torquing the barrel into
    the back side of the swing arc as the elbow
    slots.
  • The slotting of the rear elbow should allow the
    top hand to accelerate the barrel backwards.

123
Shaft to shoulder position, weight shift moving
the release point forward. A good weight shift
cue is get the knob past the lead pocket before
you release the barrel. You will shift at the
right and for a purpose.
124
Stepping in the bucket
  • The same fix for lunging works here as well. The
    step to the left is an effort to pull with the
    lead shoulder and head to generate power.
    Failure to coil the hips and load the barrel in
    the correct pattern is the upstream cause of
    lunging and or stepping in the bucket.
  • Players that hit well have a sense of popping
    the whip (the head of the barrel) on the ball.
    Those that dont hit well have a sense of pulling
    the knob forward with the head and lead shoulder.
    This group has no sense of where the barrel head
    is during the swing.
  • Players must learn top hand loading action to get
    the top hand in the proper position to function
    at contact.

125
Not Shifting Enough Weight
  • Staying on the back side and spinning is a common
    swing flaw of youth batters taught bug squish
    mechanics early in the career.
  • These hitters are out of balance to the back leg
    and are called dead front foot hitters and
    spinners.
  • When you start the rotation with the weight over
    the back leg you reverse pivot and fall back
    before impact.
  • The INFINI-TEE teaches the weight shift the right
    way.

126
Keeping to much weight back
127
Spinning
  • Spinning means the batters hips / shoulders,
    arms, and hands are all turning together.
  • It is also called a one piece swing.
  • One piece spinning generates a late connected
    swing with weakness to the opposite field.
  • The opposite of spinning is body segmentation.

128
Bug Squishing is Spinning with no weight
transfer. Watch the foot in relationship to the
red line.
129
Heel swivels behind the starting line when you
bug squish and fail to shift weight and release
the back side.
130
Drills
  • Walk up drill.
  • The walk up drill helps players that cannot get
    off their back side and tend to stay back there
    and spin or squish the bug.
  • The goal is to feel the flow of weight from back
    to front and to be able to block the push and
    convert it to rotary power.
  • In performing this drill, the batter can take a
    step behind his body with the back foot, then a
    step forward toward the tee and hit the ball off
    the tee.
  • The first step BEHIND is important as it help the
    batter coil the back hip inward, and lower the
    lead shoulder.
  • We also tip the barrel opposite field gap to get
    more segmentation of the body and assign an aim
    point for the inside seam.

131
Stopping the Bar Arm
  • You cannot stop the bar arm without finding a
    trigger replacement for it.
  • The bar arm is a bad trigger but gets ingrained
    into the batters loading pattern.
  • We have had success changing the barrel set to
    the helmet splitting slot or the 90 slot and
    changing the trigger to just the hands tipping
    the barrel to the pitcher or the opposite field
    gap at the first move.
  • Tipping the barrel (loading the hands only) as
    the hips coil vs. extending the lead arm is an
    acceptable fix.
  • This new first move is a vast improvement in
    mechanics and physics.

132
Barring Beginning
133
Bar arm is early lead arm extension. The early
extension of the lead arm creates a long swing
radius with no torque in the midsection and a
slow powerless swing. Lead arm extension should
occur during the stride by hip / shoulder spatial
separation. The rear elbow moving up and in as
the hips open should extend the arm naturally.
It should not be a conscience or active process.
134
Hips vs. Shoulder Action
  • The hips sockets are fused to the spine and the
    hip turn is flat and in a barrel and uniformly.
    The hips turn as a single unit.
  • The shoulders are floating in the muscles of the
    scapula and unlike the hips can work
    independently.
  • The lead shoulder can load down and in and the
    rear shoulder can continue to load back and in
    late in the sequence after the hips are already
    rotating forward.
  • The best hitters are loading the back shoulder
    late in the sequence just before foot plant
    maximizing the stretch in the middle.

135
Internal Swing Timing
  • In the segmented swing, the batter must practice
    the synchronization of he lower and upper body
    working against each other creating torque and
    creating it and releasing it on a fast moving
    ball.
  • The ideal synchronization has the more vertical
    barrel returning to plane after the hips have
    begun rotating into foot plant and just before
    foot plant / swing initiation.

136
KAAAAA-Pow
  • We use KAAAAA-Pow to show the time relationship
    to the pre-swing loading moves to the actual
    reactive / swing phase.
  • Bonds is loading 6-8 frames and swinging 4.5
    framed from launch to contact. That is two parts
    KAAAA to one part 1 Pow.
  • A 21 load to fire ratio should be shown and
    especially enforced on tee work.
  • The Hands Back Hitter can help create separation
    and sequence the swing into the better load to
    swing time relationship.

137
The Beginning of the True Swing
  • Ben Hogan said the golf swing begins when the
    hips turn left.
  • Batters that fail to heed this and start the
    hands to the balls as the first move will likely
    have the hands pass the hips before contact and
    become upper body hitters.
  • Getting the hands back dynamically and having the
    hips begin the positive move to the ball and
    letting the energy work up the kinetic chain
    takes 1000s of reps.
  • The lead leg should fully extend pushing away
    from the pitcher a few hundredths of a second
    before contact.

138
Dead Start Hitting
  • Dead start hitters have no pre-swing movement and
    attempt to get the barrel moving quickly at GO!
    from a motionless start.
  • The lead shoulder tends to pull OFF the ball and
    the power side is usually the pull field.
  • It is desirable to have some small muscle
    movement in the upper body and preferably a
    movement that breaks inertia giving the barrel a
    running start.

139
Upper Body Loading
  • Three anatomical parts or groups can be used to
    show a movement pattern of many MLB greats.
  • 1. The relative hand positional changes (BHUT)
    and tipping the barrel with a hand trigger.
  • 2. The relative elbow positioning. The lead elbow
    will come down nearer the body as the rear elbow
    moves up and in.
  • 3. Changes of the spine angle to move the barrel
    by postural changes.
  • ( Pujols)

140
Pre-Launch Movement
  • Pre-launch movement of the barrel breaks inertia
    and is used to have the barrel in position to be
    moving to the launch slot from above it as the
    player says Go!.
  • Batters can enter the swing plane from above it
    better than from below it.
  • It is easier to have the barrel higher to be on
    plane for a low pitch and adjust up to a higher
    pitch location and almost impossible to set up
    for a high pitch and adjust the plane downward.
  • This is why bat slots and hand sets are so
    important. They effect adjustability and
    segmentation and top hand whip.

141
B.H.U.T. (Bottom Hand Under Top)
  • When players load the barrel during their stride
    into the more vertical barrel position you can
    plainly see the bottom hand orient itself under
    the top hand.
  • The hand / arm action of the barrel can best be
    done with no shoulder counter rotation and it can
    bypass tension and too much counter rotation in
    the shoulders.
  • It is a useful cue to show hitters what the
    trigger move Bottom Hand Under the Top (BHUT)
    means and how it can replace arm barring,
    hitching, and set up the batter to rotate the
    barrel at swing initiation vs. pulling both hands
    forward.
  • The shoulders are merely a linkage in the chain
    and a slow source of power when used as a primary
    power generator.
  • Great hitters get the torque from the hip turn up
    through the torso and into the barrel too quickly
    to consider the shoulders as a power source.
  • Young players that use the slow shoulder gear as
    the power source are upper body hitters.
  • This can be seen on clips as the hands pass the
    hips and ball contact occurs before the lead knee
    locks out indicating completion of the hip turn.
  • Remember, the hips turn to completion .05 seconds
    before contact. Lead leg extension is the
    indicator point for hip turn completion.

142
BHUT is a hand only pre-launch trigger. Notice
the lead elbow comes down close to the pec muscle
during the load of the barrel and coil of the
hips. The hitter can get a sense of the barrel
in his hands. Some coaches call thisfinding the
barrel. This move has to be exaggerated to be
taught effectively and then reduced if necessary.
143
Tipping opposite gap with hip coil. This is the
back view of the tip and rip position where
the batter feels the hips coil in concert with
the hands trigger forward. The center of gravity
is shifted to the back foot as the hips coil and
the hands cock the barrel out of plane. This is
the loading action of a two plane swing. In the
Inside Seam Drill you can tip the barrel to the
outside seam and swing with the side seam as the
aiming point on approach.
144
The forward tipped barrel tipped will return to
plane at launch and create a wide hip/ shoulder
line difference (X angle) torquing the
midsection. If the barrel is loaded out of plane
it will naturally get back on plane about 4 -5
inches from foot plant. The hips get ahead of the
hands without thinking hips ahead of hands using
this upper body loading pattern.
145
All barrels return to the normal launch slot as
the hips rotate into foot plant. The overlap of
the late turning in of the shoulders just as the
hips turn out give effortless power from torso
stretch. Widening the X angle stores energy in
the torso that can be paused to handle off speed
pitches.
146
Tip and Rip
  • This drill can teach the basic concepts of upper
    body loading without any explanations as to the
    why.
  • If you hand cock the barrel to the outside seam
    as the stride begins and approach the ball aiming
    at the inside seam the proper loading action can
    occur.
  • A positive side effect of this drill is the
    uncanny ability to hit line drives back through
    the box.
  • The inside / out approach that results from this
    drill contacts the ball center getting maximum
    compression.
  • Opposite field power and outside plate coverage
    is greatly enhanced in this simple drill.

147
Tip and Rip Drill
  • Since the perfect high level swing has some
    complex elements that make explanation difficult
    we break the process down into a simple beginning
    and a reactionary phase ending that gives the
    batter vital ball flight feedback.
  • The beginning is the tip of the barrel with hip
    coil. The tip is the forward tipping of the
    barrel to the opposite field gap with the hands.
    The shoulders stay relaxed and on the same line
    of direction (LOD) as the feet and the hips coil
    as the hands only tip the barrel.
  • The two negative loading moves that we want to
    connect in the players mind are the hand tip and
    the hip coil / tuck.
  • So the command is coil your hips as you tip the
    barrel. The hips and the hands must get behind
    the rotary mechanism.
  • The reactionary phase (swing) is stride and hit
    the inside seam of that ball on the tee with the
    laces vertical and facing backwards.
  • The goal is to load the hips and the hands, carry
    the loaded hips and barrel position forward in
    the stride and then get inside the ball yielding
    a line drive through the pitchers mound area.
  • The plane transition of the barrel from tipped to
    opposite field gap to back at the rear shoulder
    as the hips open into foot plant will yield the
    effortless line drives . If they practice the
    drill with this visual feedback of the inside
    seam as the aiming target and the ball flight
    objective of a ball hit between the gaps then
    they can synch the weight shift and barrel
    movement such that the lead shoulder is coming
    back to the ball at launch as the hips are
    opening.

148
Rear Elbow Slotting
  • In rotational mechanics, the rear elbow starts
    down from an internally rotated position to a
    position tight to the players side.
  • The top hand goes from palm facing the pitcher to
    palm facing the sky.
  • Top hand action from a pronated top hand to a
    palm up top hand is essential to develop a high
    level swing.
  • The tee position and inside seam drill makes the
    rear shoulder slot to get inside the ball.

149
Are you a linear or rotational hitter?
  • This is easy
  • If both hands pull the knob forward at swing
    initiation then you have a linear hand path.
  • If you rotate the barrel between the hands at
    swing initiation then you are a rotational
    hitter.
  • The top hand in rotational hitters doesnt move
    forward at launch.
  • A pronated top hand cannot move forward and sets
    up barrel rotation at swing initiation.

150
BHUTbottom hand under top
151
Keeping the Front Shoulder on the Ball
  • For LL hitters it might be advisable to attempt
    this using a preloaded upper body.
  • The advanced player gets more torque with a
    loading pattern that BRINGS the lead shoulder
    back to the ball at precisely the right moment.
  • This can be mechanized by triggering the barrel
    to the opposite field gap or by adopting a higher
    barrel set.
  • The return of the barrel to plane will load the
    back scapula late (as the front side lower body
    base is formed) and the shoulder returns to the
    optimal launch point (on the ball) dynamically.
  • This yields timing, rhythm and X factor stretch
    that great players seek.

152
Lead Arm Extension
  • Golf is a double pendulum swing whereby the lead
    arm begins fully extended. The shoulder and the
    wrist are the levers.
  • Baseball is potentially a triple pendulum swing
    where the shoulder, the lead elbow, and the wrist
    are the levers.
  • Even in baseball, the lead arm can go into some
    form of full extension before contact on certain
    pitch locations. This lead arm extension should
    occur dynamically as the shoulder loading and hip
    unloading overlap.
  • Bar arming is when a player extends the lead
    arm fully and THEN shifts the weight.
  • Great players are getting some lead arm extension
    AS they shift and separate.

153
Lead Arm Action
  • The lead arm( bottom hand) is the connection to
    the rotating core. The lead arm must connect to
    the rotation.
  • Since a pronated top hand cannot move the bat
    forward, proper hand sets can make the lead
    shoulder the default connection to the body.

154
Is a hitch good or bad?
  • Depends
  • A hitch that triggers loading the weight back and
    alternates / delays the loading of the upper body
    as the front side base is forming can create
    tremendous bat speed.
  • A poorly timed hitch can kill quickness and
    narrow the timing window.
  • It is good to understand what is happening
    physically before cloning hitters into dead start
    positions.
  • Some batters learn to use this internal timing
    and synchronization mechanism and abbreviate it
    and still have quickness.

155
Early Bat Speed
  • Early bat speed is defined as the speed that the
    barrel generates into the backside of the swing
    arc.
  • Early bat speed is only possible with rotational
    swings that properly use the bottom and top hand
    correctly at swing initiation to rotate the
    barrel vs. pull it forward.
  • Upstream of that hand action is the elbow path
    that gets the barrel flat and on plane quickly.
  • The players hands have little to do with getting
    flat at launch. The lead elbow up and the rear
    elbow slotting down set the swing to the pitch
    plane.
  • The upper body spatially connects to the turning
    hips better with barrel rotation. Early
    connection allows the outside pitch to be hit
    deeper with great top hand action in the palm up
    position.

156
Late Bat Speed
  • Hitters that initiate the swing from a dead start
    by pulling the lead shoulder usually have a late
    connecting swing that doesnt begin to generate
    power until the barrel starts to release out
    front.
  • They are good pull hitters but often fail to
    offer (take / stare) at the away pitch as they
    instinctive realize that their mechanics do not
    favor it.

157
Trajectory
  • The ball falls almost 2-3 feet in a downward path
    from the mound to home plate. To line up the
    swing path to the pitch plane the batter must
    create an upper cut without dropping the hands.
  • The lateral tilting of the shoulders after the
    hips start turning left prevents lunging and
    lines up flat hands into the pitch plane.
  • The weight should shift head over belt buckle
    to maintain the vertical axis before the
    shoulders tilt to line up the hands to the plane
    of the ball.

158
The Tilt www.mikeepsteinhitting.com
  • The hip turn is the first move to the ball.
  • The lateral shoulder tilt is the next move.
  • The shoulder tilt connects the shoulders to the
    hip drive and lines the barrel up on the plane of
    the pitch.
  • The shoulder tilt is GO! for the upper body.
  • The weight shift must maintain a near vertical
    axis
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com