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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Jason Giambi


Posted by: The Hitman (ahsnumber3@aol.com) on Tue May 28 22:17:16 2002


>>> You can't say you can completly change your mechanics on an outside pitch. At least Major leaguers dont. All the happens is that their hand path straightens a bit to enable them to hit the ball to the right side without rolling over. I would not call that linear mechanics <<<
>
> Hi Hitman & grc
>
> You are certainly right, good hitters do not change their basic swing mechanics for pitch location. Jason Giambi is a rotational hitter. He has a chp and applies torque from initation to contact. He certainly does not extend his hands away from the shoulder (linear mechanics) and generate a straighter hand-path. I will give odds that when he hit that 430 foot shot straight-away (bat perpendicular not opposite field), he maintained a circular hand-path and his wrist did not roll.
>
> The prematurely rolling over of the wrist on outside pitches is caused from extending both arms to the “V” position before contact. Full extension of the arms (“V” position) before the bat-head is brought around to contact can happen to batters who do not have a chp and is in a weaker position to apply torque (linear mechanics). In other words – without chp and limited torque, they can’t get the bat around before the wrist roll. --- Good rotational hitters use chp and top-hand-torque that bring the bat perpendicular well before the back-arm fully extends – even on the outer 1/3 of the strike zone. Their arms reach the “V” position(and the wrist roll) well after the ball is on its way . So, as Jason did, they can cream outside pitches to left or right-center.
>
> Jack Mankin

Hey Jack
What mechanical flaw in Giambi's swing would explain why he rarely hits homeruns to opposite field, and if he does it is barely over the fence. I see hitters like Piazza and Sosa and they crush it to right field. Their top hand torque is a lot more noticeable than Giambi's. Since Giambi can hit it just as far as Sosa and Piazza to the pull field-center, and hits a lot shorter to opposite field than piazza and sosa. would you assume that he applies less torque from initiation to contact than Piazza and Sosa, or is it some other mechanical problem. I have noticed that Giambi has been lunging foward a bit too much-overstriding, sort of locking up his hips-shoulders. Oh yea just one more question please. When you look at clips how do u notice tht in more quiet bats?
The Hitman


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This is known as hitting for the cycle in a game?
   Single, double, triple, homerun
   Four singles
   Three homeruns
   Three stikeouts

   
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