Excellent video. Saving for my son who has been “jumping” at the ball. Appreciate breaking down the stride while loading and the mechanics of creating power and maintaining connection. Thanks.
This is great. My son is a high level player, but needs to make the changes you called out. While he’s in the box is it just a matter of him telling himself to stay on back leg and don’t let it leave the ground? Push through the ground instead of the other way? Thanks.
TY Matt, great explanation. I’m trying to teach 10 year old this concept of staying back heavy on back leg and coil in ground and then hip/leg drive opens while barely goes rearward to get stretch. He doesn’t have it yet but will work all winter with him 😀
@Matt Antonelli do you recommend Olympic style power lifts when training for baseball? Like trying to have huge squat, deadlift, bench press numbers? Just wondering what's a good approach for strength training for baseball.
If the question is what creates power, ie, what causes the batter to hit the ball hard, then it’s efficient rotational acceleration. From what I can observe, rotational acceleration involves a series of BALANCED cascading body levers. The batter cannot create efficient rotational acceleration of his hips without pushing against the plant of his front foot. Try suspending yourself in the air and see how well you can turn your hips. In any event, if the batter is not balanced (too forward / too backward) when he pushes against the plant of his front foot, efficiency is lost and with it impaired rotational acceleration of the body up through to the shoulders, then arms, and wrist. Tony Gwynn emphasized balance in teaching young batters and he is correct. He knew that advanced batting techniques involved consideration of different pitches requiring different emphasis on whether to swing with shoulders up or down etc. But he likely emphasized balance for young hitters because it’s the core of efficient body movement whether the player is running, fielding, throwing, or batting.
@@AntonelliBaseball I try to, but I see so many mechanical flaws in my 2 boys swings that are limiting what they can do, and then I look at the other kids on their all star team that have beautiful swings already. It's just hard lol I just wonder how do you start introducing mechanical concepts of the swing to them so it doesn't overload their brain, and at what age do you begin to have those discussions
Teach them this (my 6 year old daughter can do it): th-cam.com/video/DEAwd8LCBXE/w-d-xo.html AND Tell them to swing as fast as they can. The rest of the details can wait until they're older.
@@bucknuts8824 from what I’ve seen and heard when you tell a young kid to swing the bat as fast as possible their mechanics will often self correct to a certain degree- that’s what the body is supposed to do
@@bucknuts8824 from what I’ve seen and heard when you tell a young kid to swing the bat as fast as possible their mechanics will often self correct to a certain degree- that’s what the body is supposed to do
Were you ever with the Portland Beavers around '08? Pawn shop had a card that looks JUST LIKE YOU with the same name, scooped it up for $8. Are you the same guy? I'd pay $20 + shipping if you'd sign it for my son.
This is what a coach tried to tell me last year, i just tried it once and ignored it. I'd never seen anybody else do it, and how the hell do you hit it if your lunging XD
Get our FREE hitting drill by clicking the link below!
antonellibaseball.mykajabi.com/hittingdrill
Very good point Matt and thank you for taking your time in educated players
Excellent video. Saving for my son who has been “jumping” at the ball. Appreciate breaking down the stride while loading and the mechanics of creating power and maintaining connection. Thanks.
This is great. My son is a high level player, but needs to make the changes you called out. While he’s in the box is it just a matter of him telling himself to stay on back leg and don’t let it leave the ground? Push through the ground instead of the other way? Thanks.
Good timing on this video, just yesterday at BP my coach told me I was lunging forward and to keep my weight on the back leg.
Thank you for helping me I haven’t got a lot of hits this season
TY Matt, great explanation. I’m trying to teach 10 year old this concept of staying back heavy on back leg and coil in ground and then hip/leg drive opens while barely goes rearward to get stretch. He doesn’t have it yet but will work all winter with him 😀
@Matt Antonelli do you recommend Olympic style power lifts when training for baseball? Like trying to have huge squat, deadlift, bench press numbers? Just wondering what's a good approach for strength training for baseball.
Great explanation 👌.
very helpful, thank you
If the question is what creates power, ie, what causes the batter to hit the ball hard, then it’s efficient rotational acceleration. From what I can observe, rotational acceleration involves a series of BALANCED cascading body levers.
The batter cannot create efficient rotational acceleration of his hips without pushing against the plant of his front foot. Try suspending yourself in the air and see how well you can turn your hips. In any event, if the batter is not balanced (too forward / too backward) when he pushes against the plant of his front foot, efficiency is lost and with it impaired rotational acceleration of the body up through to the shoulders, then arms, and wrist.
Tony Gwynn emphasized balance in teaching young batters and he is correct. He knew that advanced batting techniques involved consideration of different pitches requiring different emphasis on whether to swing with shoulders up or down etc. But he likely emphasized balance for young hitters because it’s the core of efficient body movement whether the player is running, fielding, throwing, or batting.
How do you teach such advanced concepts in the swing to 5 and 7 year olds in a way that they understand?
I don’t get technical with them. Keep it pretty simple at that age.
@@AntonelliBaseball I try to, but I see so many mechanical flaws in my 2 boys swings that are limiting what they can do, and then I look at the other kids on their all star team that have beautiful swings already. It's just hard lol
I just wonder how do you start introducing mechanical concepts of the swing to them so it doesn't overload their brain, and at what age do you begin to have those discussions
Teach them this (my 6 year old daughter can do it): th-cam.com/video/DEAwd8LCBXE/w-d-xo.html
AND
Tell them to swing as fast as they can.
The rest of the details can wait until they're older.
@@bucknuts8824 from what I’ve seen and heard when you tell a young kid to swing the bat as fast as possible their mechanics will often self correct to a certain degree- that’s what the body is supposed to do
@@bucknuts8824 from what I’ve seen and heard when you tell a young kid to swing the bat as fast as possible their mechanics will often self correct to a certain degree- that’s what the body is supposed to do
How's the new facility coming along? Done, I'm guessing ...
What about mookie betts, he has a big stride
Yeap gotta stay in that back side, with balance
Were you ever with the Portland Beavers around '08? Pawn shop had a card that looks JUST LIKE YOU with the same name, scooped it up for $8. Are you the same guy? I'd pay $20 + shipping if you'd sign it for my son.
Oy vey
This is what a coach tried to tell me last year, i just tried it once and ignored it. I'd never seen anybody else do it, and how the hell do you hit it if your lunging XD
I tell my guys "don't stride to jump forward, but to bury that back foot." This is an important concept for younger guys.
Great idea for the hitters, terrible for right handed batter's box maintenance... 😅