[ About ]
[ Batspeed Research ]
[ Swing Mechanics ]
[ Truisms and Fallacies ]
[ Discussion Board ]
[ Video ]
[ Other Resources ]
[ Contact Us ]
Re: Over Coaching


Posted by: Bart () on Wed Sep 11 07:16:15 2002


Too All,
>
> I have noticed that many posts to this site have an opinion about the smallest body movement in the swing. Most of this is not relevant and they are poor coaching especially for kids 10 to 15.
> Here are my reasons.
>
> 1. Most of this stuff is not relevant. Some of these points such as what part of the field the toe of the front foot points, position of the knee, how far from the back shoulder the hands should be, where the bat is in the stance prior to the pitcher going into the windup and all the other attention to the finest details only serve to make coaching more complicated. Most of these "fine points" have very little to do with good hitting.
>
> 2. Young people do not have the control of the body that allows them to even think about where their knee is or where their toe is pointing. Even if these points are relevant, which I don't think they are, they should be added after the kids learns the major elements of the swing. Further, many of these little "quirks" of the swing are picked up from watching tape of the "pros." Many of them are created for some special need that the pro has because of some quirk in his swing. In some cases, it has nothing to do with anything and they pro doesn't even know he does it.
>
> 3. Guess what, THE KIDS ARE NOT LISTENING. By loading up coaching with many minor movements of the body many of which kids do not understand, undermines the credibility of the coach. This also distracts the batter from the major elements of the swing. These minor elements tend to take on the same importance as the really important ones when they are talked about and taught. They confuse the kid and soon he shuts the coach down. Most kids don't openly rebel. They just don't listen any more.
>
> F. J.

It is true, the kids are not listening. What do you do when one coach says do A,B,C and D, the next coach says do A,C but instead of B and D, do E and F, and the next coach says.....and so on.

But quite frankly, I think many at this site already know this. I think many parents and hitters are probably on the look out for their own personal missing piece of the puzzle, and if and when they find it, it can make things click for them. I would hope there is no coach who would put together a Master Coaching Plan & demand that there hitters follow it, down to every minute detail.


Followups:

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

Anti-Spambot Question:
Who hit a record 70 home runs in one season?
   Kobe Bryant
   Wayne Gretzky
   Walter Payton
   Barry Bonds

   
[   SiteMap   ]