Showing posts with label Henderson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henderson. Show all posts

Thursday, March 24, 2011

My Kid Hits Great with You, but Sucks in the Game!

I don't know if that is a compliment or not. The more I do this the more I hear Perry Husband in the back ground telling me that giving lessons the old way is pointless. I am really starting to get what he was saying. Believe me when I say I will always give one on one lessons, but only a few of them. When I first get a new client I always have to look at some key things. I video everyone. I like to slow things down so I can see some of the key factors I look for when doing my analysis. I also like to get and exit speed. This is to show that when the hitter makes a more efficient move they get a better result. I will always talk about summation of sequential segments. Yes, I even talk about this with my younger students. Yes, they look at me with eyes of confusion, but I explain it to them in a way that they understand the principle and how they already use it in baseball. I will always talk about distance of force application and explain it to them the same way I did summation of sequential segments. That's just me and how I instruct. I used to throw days and days of batting practice. The kids love it. The parents love it. So what's the big deal? The big deal is I have trained hitter to great batting practice hitters but just okay game hitters. So I decided to change the way I did things. I went from a more swing focused approach to a timing focused approach. And let me tell you the results are amazing in one aspect but awful in others. The results have been amazing in the sense that I have put more underclassmen on varsity programs than ever before in the past. I also hear stories of how my students are excelling at tryouts and making elite club teams. It doesn't matter what kind of pitcher I bring into class to throw, these kids make faster adjustments and hit everyone. They are some of the smartest, toughest, level headed students I have ever had. So what can be so awful? Financially this move has driven some people away. They like the one on one time. That's all they know. Change is scary and different. "My son doesn't like hitting with all those other boys." Why? He has to play with 10 -14 other kids. What is the difference with 2 or 3? When I look at what I really get paid for it is really simple. I have an ever expanding knowledge and passion for hitting. I have played and have experience. I can teach and I am bless with this ability. Not everyone can articulate things in ways that people really get it. But the bottom line is I get results. My kids come in with bad swings and good swings and most of the time they leave hitting harder. I get results.
So about a year ago I switch over and started training at game speed and getting hitters more at bats during the week. Players that were sitting the bench last year are starting this year and turn heads. I switched over to a muscle memory program and a timing program and have almost done away with the hands on every move looks like this training. I have come to the conclusion that there is no "Perfect Swing" Linear or rotational? Neither is the best. It may be a combination of both. The two greatest home run hitters had different swings. Barry Bonds was rotational and Hank Aaron was a combination of forward push and rotation. Ichiro, who has been the most productive hitter in the last 10 years is linear. So really there is no best way. Hitters are good because they are on time. I saw Rod Carew over and over just flick his bat on balls and he would hit rockets to the gaps. It looked like he way out on his front leg and fooled by the pitch. I guess not cause he would flick the sweet spot on the ball and smack!
So where am I going with this? I really do believe that batting practice has it's place it's good to get the feeling of a good swing and where proper contact should be made. A tee works for this too. But it is game experience and game play that gets a hitter prepared for greatness. How is confidence built in BP when the pitcher just floats the ball in the zone and a hitter kills it over and over only to get in a game and this never happens? They strike out, ground out, and every once in a while hit a mistake. As a hitter this made me want to pull my hair out and stump baby chickens. Where did I see this game hitting turn hitters around at the professional level? The Latin players would finish the regular minor league season and rush home for the winter league. When these young players came back they had play another 60 games all winter. Most of the Americans were just working out getting in shape. Some guys played in recreational leagues. I played fast pitch softball so I could keep my eye and timing. But most guys were just taking BP with each other and working out. When the first week of spring training came. I killed the ball after playing softball all winter. Guys like Magglio Ordonez, Carlos Lee, and Mario Valdez came back from the winter leagues and were punishing pitchers. Today Magglio and Carlos are superstars. Mario was hampered with injuries and never made it, but believe me he was a very good hitter. Its is game speeds and training at these speeds that makes hitters better. If you take a good hitter and put him in 100 games per year over a 5 year period he would have had around 2000 at bats in that time period. Five years later he would be a better hitter. If you took an okay hitter meaning clearly not good and put him in 150 per year for 5 years he would have around 3000 at bats in that period. Five years later I would venture to say he would be a better hitter than the good hitter was based on this. Both are competing at the same level. Mastery is about doing the same thing over and over. If the okay hitter has experienced 1000 times more than the good hitter did then his mastery skills are going to be better. The Okay Hitter (OH)will have been in more situations that saw a curve ball, slider, change up, low outside fastball and a belt high fast than Good Hitter (GH). Even if their swings are still the exact same after five years the one with more experience will do better. Now if you flipped the group gave the GH a 1000 more at bats then you would see a huge separation in the hitters.
This is my personal experience with this I was a below average fielder when I came into pro baseball. When I finished seven years later I was a very solid infielder and catcher. Seven years of ground balls everyday for 10 to 20 minutes becomes a lot of repetition. I couldn't block a ball when I started catching. I was afraid to put myself in front of a 90 mph fastball in the dirt. I rarely caught my first year in a game. Everyday I caught 2 to 3 bullpens and started practicing my blocking there. Five years later I was pretty solid defensively behind the plate and I still am. Then there was throwing. From behind the plate I couldn't throw out the trash. In my fifth year I started working with Tony Pena and I started throwing a few people out. Today I can throw out the trash at 39. I work on my release almost everyday even though I only play 1 to 2 games per week now. Today I throw more than most BP coaches, except for Mike Moseley.
In my personal experience any training that is close to or as fast as game speed is going to be the most beneficial and rewarding. This is why I offer so many live hitting and timing training classes now. There will be a new group of hitters that are coming through the Las Vegas and Henderson area that will be a cut above the rest. They will not have a cookie cutter swings. No one will say, "That's a Greg Shepard swing." People won't be able to tell them from the next kid. They all have their own swings with a few little adjustments. Their timing will be impeccable and they will destroy opposing pitchers. These kids will have seen more live pitching than any of their teammates. They will have been in more first and third with one out or bases loaded with two outs situations than anyone else on the field that day. They will be seasoned hitters and people will take them serious. How do I know this? It's already happening. Perry was right and sometimes change is good. Its time for change to happen in baseball.

If you want more information about my up coming classes then please email me at info@hithardernow.com or visit my website. www.hithardernow.com

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Do it again!



This is probably the second most used statement I make when giving lessons.
The first is push and turn. "Do it again, do it again,do it again, and finally do it again. Because once you are able to do it once then one of the keys to success is the ability to repeat the right move. This is part of the "Mastery Process". It's just like in Karate Kid when Mr. Miyagi says, "Wax on wax off, sand the floor, paint the fence." Young Daniel Russo waxes on and off so much he can't even lift his arms. He becomes angry because he wants to learn something new so he can fight. He gets bored with this work. Then Mr. Miyagi shows him the method behind the madness. There is karate in everything in life. Life is karate and karate is life. Well in my world baseball is life and life is baseball. I find life and learning in both. My purpose is to get my hitters to the point where when a strike crosses the meaty part of home plate that the reaction that happens is pure perfection and pure intention to hit the ball as hard as possible. My purpose is to get my hitters to be able to hit 50, 100, 200, 1000 balls in a row hard. Not just hit the ball but hit the ball hard. I have been playing baseball for over 30 years now and I still do not hit every ball hard in game situations. This is an impossibility, but when I practice with full intention to strike the ball hard every time that is exactly what happens. I repeat the same move over and over with the same result over and over. Do it again, do it again, do it again. Do it again so that it become natural and second nature it becomes my mantra.
Master is truly a life time process. Refinement through repetition. It has to be the right repetition also.
I want to acknowledge Alex Tisminezski for all his hard work, repetition and patience.
Well done.
Alex has also been working with John Birds on pitching and threw his first no hitter and few weeks ago. He flirted with perfection until he walked one hitter. Watch out for this future star.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

New Members and New Records.


Jordan Blanchard currently pitching for Western Nevada Community College posted a 91 mph exit speed over the Christmas break. His younger brother Chandler, pictured here, bested him and set a new personal record of 93 mph. Way to go Chandler! Chandler has also recorded exit speeds with live pitching at 97 mph. Very soon I will be creating the 100 mph club and I am pretty sure that Chandler will be one of the first high school hitters in Nevada to join an elite group of hitters. Chandler is a freashmen at Coronado High School in Henderon, NV.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

AVAILABLE FOR PRIVATE LESSONS

I am currently taking new clients so call me if you are interested.
702.250.2678 or email me at thehitman@helloworld.com.

I guarantee that the child, high schooler and even pro will hit the ball harder or you don't pay.
Call Me for rates. I do Individual, Groups, Coaches, and Teams.
Also I'm available for speaking engagements.
702.250.2678
Lessons by appointment ONLY.

What are you waiting for?

1226 Wigwam Ave
Henderson, NV 89074
(Located in Brundage Electric Warehouse)
Put this address in the Yahoo Maps area to get fast directions.