[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Re: Re: Re: Jack follow up


Posted by: tom.guerry (tom.guerry@kp.org) on Tue Nov 11 07:23:37 2003


>>> The question I have is whether you experience or teach any "firming up","squeezing","connecting" the front shoulder as part of/preparation for the "in unison" feel of rotation ? <<<
>
> Hi Tom
>
> Yes, and as you have pointed out, the "firming up","squeezing","connecting" must continue well into the swing. A bat that is gaining a high rate of angular displacement (first, back toward the catcher), produces a much greater load on the arms than a bat sliding linearly knob first. The batter should feel the pressure of the rotating body against lead arm to continue powering a high rate of bat-head acceleration. At least until the back-forearm has lowered toward horizontal.
>
> The problems arise when the batter fires the hands (and bat knob) forward at initiation causing a loss of linkage from the lead-shoulder to the bat. The batter can now rotate the shoulders with little load to overcome. The batter’s rotating body may catch up with the lead-arm, but the bat-head is now lagging far behind the power curve. The shoulders finish rotation with the lead-arm across the chest while the bat is just reaching the lag position.
>
> The body rotating with little-to-no load allows the hips and shoulders to rotate together (the "one-peace rotation"). My faulty writing regarding “unison” had many readers thinking this was what I advocated. I hope most of you that read my posts now understand how I use the term and I will rewrite that article soon with more clarity.
>
> Jack Mankin
>

That is an excellent answer.Thanks Jack !


Followups:

Post a followup:
Name:
E-mail:
Subject:
Text:

Anti-Spambot Question:
What is the MLB championship called?
   World Championship
   World Series
   The Finals
   The Cup

   
[   SiteMap   ]