Re: Re: Re: opposite field hitting
> > > Jack,
> > > I can't say how impressed I am with your DVD. You were able to credibly articulate how to swing a bat in a way that is not only counter-intuitive, but contrary to all the so-called "fundamentals" most of us have learned. Now if I can unlearn as much as I have learned, I will do OK.
> > >
> > > As the (ehem) Coach on my slowpitch team, I have always appreciated the merits of NOT going 1-3 with 2 popups and a sexy 400ft. solo shot, so I have preached the merits of "humble hitting". Consequently, I have used our right field, Green Monster-style wall the way Wade Boggs did to hit doubles and for average. I have made a good living off of hitting to the spots on the field the defense gave me, and keeping runners moving. But after watching the Final Arc and doing my early stages hitting with the prescribed mechanics, I am flat-out unable to reconcile my wish to hit to the opposite field with proper rotational technique. I'm pulling everything. To be fair, I am hitting laser beams already that no one may get to, and if I can continue to hit the ball this hard, my average will not suffer at all. But I still want to know if/how to "go with the pitch" or hit to spots. I realize pitch selection is key, but keeping my hands out in front is not an option anymore with rotational mechanics.
> > >
> > > Should I just concentrate on pure technique for now, or is there a way to develop my ability to use all fields with proper rotational technique at the same time?
> > >
> > > Thanks
> > > Bill
> >
> > Hi Bill:
> >
> > If you are successful in pulling everything, keep doing it! Pull hitting allows you to "knock" the ball over the shortest fence--more precisely, the fence where the ball can be struck with the greatest authority. Ott, Williams, and McGwire pulled almost pitches--regardless of rotation in the strike zone. For more information on pull hitting, see my March 2004 posts called "Power (or Pull) Field Orientation)."
> >
> > Best Wishes,
> > BHL
> > Knight1285@aol.com
> >
> > P.S. My advice is to keep pulling everything!
>
>
> Find me one credible source, either a big league hitter or hitting instructor that is in favor of this "pull everything" philosophy and I will at least think about not laughing out loud at this hitting advise. And I知 not talking about your opinion of McGuire痴 swing or Williams swing, I知 talking about from the horses mouth...I知 talking about a big league hitting coach or an organization attempting to implement this philosophy...?
>
> Why and how do Steve Avery and Kirk Reader (two or three ago all be it) get people out?
Hi Scott:
Jr. Griffey, for sure, is a PFO.
Scott, pulling every pitch is more of a mental strategem than a hitting mechanic.
I would never tinker with Piazza's opposite field approach during his prime because he was successful doing it.
I'm going to have to disagree with you politely on this issue...if Bill's successful pulling every pitch, let him do just that. Besides, it is easy to pull every pitch in Slow Pitch Softball. At the Superlevel, Wendell Rickard employs this strategy, as does Mark Martin, Scott Holt, Doug Johnson, and Mike Weismar. The only person who is not a PFO is Ric Lucas.
The first priority of coaches, in my opinion, is guidance, not superimposing their mental strategies on others.
Finally, I am diametrically opposed MLB's cliches, one of them which is hitting to all fields. For instance, when instructors herald a guy like Ken Griffey Jr. as a spray hitter, they ignore the fact that statistics prove him to be a dead pull hitter.
Well, it's nice to debate.
Sincerely,
BHL
Knight1285@aol.com
P.S. Scott, let's not rely on instructors--they have their opinions. Let's agree to analyze what percentage of pitches--regardless of location--the top home run hitters in the league pull. This idea came from an unnamed source in my March posts, and now I feel it is time that I put it to good use. By the way, if you search through the months with questions about PFO's--I believe it is late 2004--there is a person that names an individual that teaches my way of thinking.
One last thing--the presentation was dynamic. I'll give you feedback in a day or so on the hitting material.
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