[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Heavier Bat vs. Waiting on the Ball


Posted by: () on Sun Apr 18 17:47:32 2004


My son plays in a 12 year old competitive league. He has a great swing, but his hitting problem generally is that he swings too soon, and we have been working on this.
>
> Tonight he had his 1st scrimage with his new team & the coaches told him he needs a heavier bat because he is swinging too soon. These coaches, while I appreciate their time & effort I don't believe have played since their H.S. days a good 25 years ago.
>
> He gets privates from current college players and they have taught him to wait on the ball to his success and I agree with their viewpoint on hitting. When he waits, he creams the ball, when he doesn't he either gets out or strikes out which is what happened tonight at his scrimmage.
>
> The coaches on his team told him that his bat is "too light"....I was always taught, the lighter the better and have always bought him the lightest bat on the market. My thinking is if his coaches have him hit with a heavier bat(which is what they did tonight), this will slow down his bat speed and his hitting will be less effective. He is not a big, muscular kid & needs all the help he can get with power and bat speed at the plate. I feel that these coaches are basically trying to slow his swing down so he can make contact....I'm feeling this is counter-productive to my son becoming a good hitter and increasing his bat speed.
>
> Thoughts?....and if anyone agrees with my thoughts on this, how do I let the coaches know I don't want my son using a heavy bat without seeming like a pain in the neck parent. Right now he uses a 31/18.5 (-12.5 drop).
>

I believe your son's problem can be corrected by delaying his timing a bit. Let him wait for the pitcher to land his foot on the ground and then let your son stride at that moment. If he is still too early making wait a bit longer before striding, this will surely correct his problem.

TZ


Followups:

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

Anti-Spambot Question:
How many innings in an MLB game?
   4
   3
   9
   2

   
[   SiteMap   ]