I pitched from little league to highschool and at age 13 I started to play travel baseball and I played for coaches that played pro or college. So I am thinking about starting baseball lessons. So what do you recommend as for drills standpoint if I am teaching a kid who is starting to pitch?
Coach I give you permission to break down my mechanics as a 52-year-old to compare to a 20-year-old and see what happens over time. th-cam.com/video/4aA5hYM8rq4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for making this video! I'm an animator and I'm glad there are resources like this to explain movement. Also, the slo-mo clips are very appreciated.
Coach, I pitched in high school and picked up some bad habits. Now as a coach for the last 18 years I have tried to teach my pitchers proper techniques. One thing I found with the younger kids especially on the hand break is to tell something that a college coach once told me, “ Thumbs to the thighs then fingers to the sky”. It seems to help not only with hand position but also helps to keep their front shoulder closed
Coach, my return to baseball nearly 20 years after I last played it (I'm 32, haven't played since early teens) has led me to discover an aptitude for pitching I never knew I possessed (as a lefty, I was always usually just a first baseman or outfielder), and in doing this my life and my health have improved in ways I could have never predicted. I have been practicing with some basic instructional videos from elsewhere on youtube and that helped me with the general ability to just throw pitches, but I find your videos have the greatest effect on me actually unlocking my potential by giving the most granular examination of the exact things I need to work on while remaining easy to digest. I am still very much a work in progress but your material has already made a huge difference. My fastball recently hit 90 mph for the first time, and I'm able to dot the corners more consistently with each workout every passing day. I now have a healthy obsession with becoming a better pitcher so I will be ordering a copy of your book to further supplement me on my journey. Thank you for giving away freely on your channel what many other teachers would charge a lot of money for, you are a gentleman and a scholar.
I like this story. I recently tried my hand at pitching as well. I'm having trouble with the feeling of the stretch on the body. Idk how to capture that "powerful" feeling. Any tips from beginner to beginner?
That's great ! Love to see comments like that in many different areas ,...sports, carpentry, writing, ...just anything! Great presentation Coach Blewitt. I've never played BB but been an avid golfer for almost 50 years, and have always been curious on how the mechanics of throwing, but specifically pitching build up the power . Great that you have gotten back into doing something you like, AND with newfound advances in performance 👊. Gonna post more directly to Blewitt
Yes! I used to be a pitcher in my day and am now teaching my son. This is by far the best, most up to date, and comprehensive video I have came across. Gold. Thanks!
After watching this video, your batting mechanics video, and just a little practice with friends, I've gone from not thinking I could play baseball in a million years to being fully confident that I could be an above average player on my school's team. Granted, we're only a handful of schools away from being the worst in Ohio, but I'm still glad I can enjoy the sport. I have a full year to practice and hone my skills, and I'm excited for baseball season when it finally comes back around. Thank you for this opportunity
Hey coach, I am a 14 year old starting pitcher trying to learn mechanics and get reallly good. This video is extremely helpful and I feel as im progressing as I should. I am very grateful to have come across your page and you are very kind to have this 38 minutes of mechanics out for free. Highly appreciated
I learned so much from your video for tennis serves. It is such a high quality reference! Most of the videos on tennis are confusing and get lost in the details. To have someone lay out the mechanics of throwing it's much easier to see through the essential parts and ignore the minute details.
This is amazing, I have a 13 year old that throws hard and is a lefty so his coaches want him to pitch. I was Shotput discus guy and did not play baseball competitively. This simplified this and helped me relate this to power positions and rotational energy I used weight throwing in track and field to his pitching. His command is getting so much better now that he has a consistent delivery that he is learning to self correct. Thanks Coach Dan!!
This one is the most complete. I play badminton so some principles behind the mechanics are quite similar. I am an assistant coach for my son's team. I thought about using the waist driving the shoulder then the elbow then the wrist. However, the head coach seem to forgot this part when he teaches pitching. Thank you!
I only pitched until i was 18 then joined the military. I was a really good pitcher, wish i stuck with it. Crazy thing is, I'm now teaching my son how to pitch and a lot of what i am teaching him is what you're teaching. I did learn a few new things from you but naturally, i pitch just how you're teaching. I was never taught, never watched videos, there were no videos back then actually. just cool to know what i was doing and now teaching my son was correct. great video
I wish I had access to these types of videos when I was younger. In college, I had really bad mechanics which lead to multiple shoulder injuries. I never really had any good pitching coaches that told me what I was doing wrong. Trying to keep a long story short, I moved to Japan thinking I was done with baseball. A guy I worked with had me join his amateur baseball team where the manager was a former minor league pitcher, and he showed me how much I was doing wrong. Now I am 34, and able to hit 90 on a good day, which is about 5 mph faster than back when I was in college. It just goes to show how important proper mechanics and coaching are. Young players are lucky to have channels like yours to go to!
I am so jealous of this man he loves pitching so much he has taken this time to deconstruct it an analyze and reverse engineer the entirety of it and then he shares the knoledge!!!!!! I ! Really hope i find smth to feel devotion towards 💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕
I like when he says some things are absolute and others are negotiable, i really like that nothing is true everything is permitted vibes a lot very much correct
I found this extremely helpful for coaching young players. Thank you for making the video. It really helps to see thia thorough breakdown of what each part of the body is doing from through the delivery. My 11 yr old who is one of our league's better pitchers, will definitely benefit from working a couple bad habits out of his motion and will likely gain some velocity as a result.
Thanks for this video as a super short pitcher it was hard to understand mechanics from just watching in fast motion but you breaking down every part helped a lot.
Hi coach Dan, I gotta say that this video complements your book. With both combined I can understand pitching more, so I can explain and demonstrate to kids better.
Great to hear! Thanks for supporting my work - and yes, books are great but it's a challenging medium to describe pitching mechanics in - video is a lot easier than still photos.
I am a disc golfer by trade, I used to play baseball growing up so the mechanics of a forehand have always felt very similar and thus natural. I have been struggling to figure out what to work on since disc golf is a small sport and there really aren't that many good guides about forehand that I feel are helpful at addressing the key mechanics. Instead I find the kind of stuff that you said right at the start of the video you don't like to do, specific advice; does and don'ts when it is all a grey area and learning the basic mechanics can be a lot more beneficial even if it is a lot more time consuming than some quick fixes. Anyway, excellent video I appreciate the simplicity that you explain everything with, makes it really easy to see and feel what your talking about. Certainly has given me a lot to think about and tweak.
I can't verify that every point made is correct, without the baseball or kinesiology background, but assuming they generally are this is maybe the best video I've ever watched on TH-cam. The explanation, the timestamps, the honesty about there being different potential "right" ways, just really, really solid work. Thank you.
in general, anyone who would have qualms with my explanations would be nitpicking, maybe see things slightly different but on the whole not far off. And, looking at slow motion of MLB players on TH-cam is a good way to verify what I'm explaining at different points.
Hi coach! Excelent video, You've helped me so much, I have like 3 years trying to find an adjustable mechanic for me and I couldn't find a good one for me, after starting to see your videos and advices I started to get stronger, and I had a lot of improvement on my mechanics and command. Now I have decent miles and I hope i'll get even better 'cause of your video. THANKS!!
Coach Blewitt, thanks so much for this video. Besudes all the great info and presentation, I'm sure it takes plenty of effort just making the video! I've never been a baseball player but many years a golfer. Started learning the mechanics of the golf swing as a youngster, (I'm 57 now). The amazing power built up by the human body to deliver 100 mph pitches has always fascinated me. In golf, there are 101 things to get right for a)reliable accuracey but then b) power(distance). While the zillion things to get a reliable swing, the power part is , IMHO, way easier in golf than Pitching, for sure. Golfers (after, setup,grip, stance, and initial takeaway,) the big thing is just winding up the big muscles, essentially legs and back. After watching your video,... Dang but there's a lot of moving parts! Again, great presentation and clear information presented in an easy to understand and clear manner. I'm sure you are helping loads of folks progress thier "game". Great work 👊
Awesome pitching video coach! I keep returning to site to review mechanics. Martial arts expert with a background in sports medicine. You're my go to reference for pitching. I'll check out your books. 👍
this is an outstanding presentation of mechanics..i wish i had this kind of instruction when i was young--now having moved to golf, pickleball and hopefully tennis there are movements u describe that i know will help me in these other sports..the reason being,though very athletic i carried poor throwing mechanics into other sports..even the 100s of golf Ytube videos i watched didnt help my swing because none of those vids were explained and clicked like yours did..yes i ll be cherry-picking certain movements to apply but i just want to thk you coach..i wish i could roll back the years to my baseball time but at least your expertise will help thousands of kids and coaches...so glad i stumbled onto your site and look forward to viewing lots more..you have a gift of teaching and thks for your generous sharing of your expertise..yes i subscibed..thks again
Hey Dan! I'm a 19 year old swiss who just started playing basebal a few weeks ago, and your video is the PERFECT guide i was looking for. I'm the type of person to look up exactly what I want in detail to do it correctly an in motion from the beginning on (as Electrical Engineering student with heavy emphasis on physics, the physics is just as much pleasure for me). Although I've just started out, I want to learn it in the correct movements as to not develop any bad habits which would be painful to "remove", as I've already experienced in tennis. Your video is exactly the kind i was so hard looking for, so thank you! I'm the type to learn fast, even though i barely play 2 weeks I'm already hitting balls considerably better than when starting out, which probably comes from already have played tennis for years, and getting an "eye for the ball" I have 2 questions though as a beginner that I'd like to ask, and that is 1: How should i train throwing across the field, I mean should I apply the same throwing mechanics as in pitching? I understand that it's something different, but nevertheless I'm curious as how you would recommend 2: Is there any suggestion of how to analyse and film myself during throwing/pitching to see what i can/should be doing? Thanks in advance! Great video
Take video from the side and front. I have an online course that shows you what to do with such video after - it walks you through the analysis and gives you drills to do. But, that may be more for down the road. Use this video for infield throwing (and search my channel for more): th-cam.com/video/P0DhI_d_F2E/w-d-xo.html
Impressive Tutorial! As a Coach myself and a student of pitching, It’s nice to see science based education that’s explained in detail. Too many times I come across conventional wisdom that is not based on facts or research! I’m now a fan and will continue to reference your videos!
Dan, I have scoured the internet for help with understanding pitching mechanics so I can teach the kids on my teams. And this is the best and most thorough resource I've seen. I am gonna hold onto it, and I'm sure I will refer to it time and again. Thank you so much for this awesome resource. The hardest thing for me to understand is the transition between the leg lift and the stride. It seems like right as you get to the top of the leg lift, you want to point the front hip out to lead. At the same time, the lead leg moves down and out toward home plate. And right as it gets to the low point is when you should push with the back leg. Does that all sound right? And when you push, would you say you push as hard as you can or is it a controlled push to some extent? Thanks again from me. Prison Mike, to you!
mostly right, yes - but there isn't really a conscious push - lots of parts of the delivery more or less happen without conscious thought. I didnt cover the stride much in this video, but it really is the result, more or less, of the other things that come before it.
@@DanBlewett Thanks Dan! I really appreciate it. My son is in 12U rec, and we've got about 7 kids on the roster who like to pitch which is awesome. Like I said, this is an excellent resource that I will continue to study and share with others. You are the man!
As far as glove hand movement goes, I taught kids to pull their upper body to their glove to get that upper body torque instead of letting their glove just kind of dangle at their side (I called that "dragging their glove"). I believe this helped with balance of the throwing arm and to increase upper body torque to increase velocity. Was I doing this wrong? This video is, hands down, the best pitching mechanics video I have ever seen.
No - you're explaining it right. I mention that somewhere in the video, that your glove doesnt really come toward the body, you go toward the glove. But, the glove has to clear the body and get completely left (for righties) of the body. The glove shouldnt stay in front of the torso at all. Whether it tucks compact or dangles doesnt really matter - Pitchers just tend to tuck it because I *think it helps with accuracy
Hey! College pitcher here! I think a lot of points you make here are great for pitchers learning, and you do an amazing job explaining why we do what we do in the delivery. However, I might disagree a bit with the hip tilt. Pitchers should make sure not to lead too much with that front hip, as that will create an uphill tilt of the hips which prevents your hips from rotating on time, and thus stunting the hi shoulder separation. Overall great video!
I subscribed to you earlier in the year and hit it again. Very good. You are so precise with no bs. Big 12 pitcher here. Reach out to me if you think an app can move forward.
Huge thanks. My 10yo 52mph pitcher just came back from his 2nd round of shoulder pain /tendinitis (x-ray said it’s not LL shoulder). His arm pulls back into an obtuse angle. Im urgently trying to shorten his arm path, and and this video will be extremely helpful. My only issue is your not giving Honey Oh’s it’s long overdue guilty pleasure credit. Stuff was so good, no thoughtful parent would buy it.
this just put together so many random pieces for me. I feel like you just made me a way better pitching coach. lots of stuff that didn't make sense you explained why it was wrong and stuff that did make sense you explained better than I could. my son has started throwing an unintentional slider and it has been a really tough habit to break. his pitching coach insisted he torque his wrist so the ball faces CF at the fully loaded arm position. seems the answer I have been looking for the past 2 weeks is a neutral wrist and a loaded scap / rotation in the shoulder. thank you!!!!
New to your channel and am very impressed. My goal is to use your videos to apply to my 14 year old son. We live in a baseball competitive community and he is trying to achieve the JV team. This will help us tremendously. Do you except videos to break down? Thank you again.
Coach forgive me if i missed it previously, or in a different video, but what is your take on pushing with the ARCH of your foot instead of TOE? i am continuing my baseball career, and would like to freshen up with some ... more "fundamentally sound" training that i can partake in.
i’m a tennis player randomly nerding out about pitching right now and it’s cool seeing the similarities in a tennis serve and a baseball pitch. in tennis the tossing arm does the same thing as the glove arm here, and everyone calls it the “reactive brake,” which leads the second half of the motion (the releasing/following through part). nick kyrgios would probably be an insane pitcher. also a slice serve is basically a curveball thrown with a racket, from what i can tell.
glad you enjoyed it. the acceleration phase / release is a lot different. It's shoulder external rotation in a throw, it's significantly more of a tricep extension on a tennis serve. slow motion shows the difference - it's interesting and I did some digging into it years ago.
I'm a youth league rec coach and also working with my 10 year son, who is into his 2nd year of pitching. Enjoying your content and using it to help refresh my approach to the basics. I pitched way back in the day, from 8 to 18 and my throwing arm was ruined by 17. Obviously I needed better information back then but my goal is their safety, #1. My question is on the glove side part of delivery, right around release time frame. What do you think about pulling/tucking glove side arm including arm, eblow, and glove into left peck area of the chest? For example, picture a football player running with the football craddled in one arm? That is how I deliver and noticed my son does the same. We see most of these kids doing way too much around their delivery area and getting off balance. Then their eye line to the target is broken. At this age group we stress accuracy and good mechanics, saving velocity for down the road.
you'll see exactly zero pro pitchers tuck their glove to their pec. it's the wrong way to throw overhand. there is no difference in "mechanics for accuracy" vs "mechanics for velocity" they are the same. the way I explain the glove arm mechanics in this video reflects what 99% of good pitchers do. they're really not personal opinions.
@@DanBlewett thanks for answering my question. Definitely something we will correct. Me and other coaches are trying to address any bad mechanics before the becoming habits. It's some of the kid's first year to pitch. My son does have a good glove hand motion to begin, like you have in the video but was afraid that tucking his arm and glove into his chest was a no go. I also understand what you mean on the mechanics and I wasn't very clear about the accuracy/velocity part of our focus for this age group.
@@DanBlewett also just watched your video on glove side arm and near the end the rules part you have in there. Lol, guess I that would have answered my question. 😂 th-cam.com/video/NbcgV4nGKhE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=v4-WAU9Gk2lZ6Bl5
Coach, I am a struggling 17 year old pitcher. I was 85-86 my whole high school season and now during my summer season I can barely touch 80. Hoping this can help me! Thank you for the knowledge!
Great video i could never get my shoulders uphill i guess i have bad mechanics. I like the end where you talk about teaching the next gen better than we were taught. Idk y but my coach would change my number every game. By high school i was done with numb fingers. Traveling club team + no internet+ no smart phones= me pitching 5-7 games in a row alternating between my left and right arm. regardless he shoulda known better and single mom always working i had no voice.
One of the best pitching mechanics breakdown videos I've seen. I am going to direct all my aspiring youth pitchers to this video as a guide to what we teach on the field. Thanks for putting this together.
You are right on with timing..when you land your arm is getting ready to get on top of the ball...I feel your arm does go quickly into the "drag" straight arm and as you are about to land is where you are getting into that elbow leading action and getting on top of the ball.. working with one who has been throwing 3 + years with long arm action...how do you retrain your arm? In your mind you have to communicate to your arm where to stop going long...good video..is there a way to send you a picture on how to eliminate a "flaw"?
Fantastic breakdown. I too, have scoured the internet for pitching and this is the best. I have a sophomore throwing 88, 6'3" and finally realizing his potential. Your breakdown will confirm certain mechanics but was taught to thrown from behind the head. A little more velo but I suspect less accuracy? He's long and lanky so lots of moving parts that he needs to control for consistency. Any tips for long, whippy pitchers or is it just refining and being consistent with mechanics?
Insufficient preseason toss and throwing too hard later with an unseasoned arm. My son and I always began soft tossing in January and gradually increased velocity over a period of weeks and months. He never got a sore arm. My daughter refused to season her arm properly and got frustrated because she expected to be able to pitch with control with a week or two prep. She had a strong arm and threw hard regardless of being warned she would hurt. And invariably she would start hurting after a few games. My son played 3 times as many games on multiple leagues; knew his release point, had awesome control and never got sore.
Hey Coach, great video. Do you actively flex your front leg when you land to keep it firm or is there another cue you use? I tend to leak energy into my lead leg. Thanks.
no, you shouldnt think about it. Long toss and running throws help teach your leg what to do. Also throwing uphill - up a mound (the wrong way) or throwing up the back side of the mound can help.
Hey Dan, do you still plan on making some videos geared towards older/adult rec league players? I'm a 43 year old pitcher myself, and I'm curious because every coach I've ever worked with says coaching adults is a lot different than kids. One said he thinks drills and teaching "feel" is less effective than just simply telling them exactly what movements to make. Wondering what thoughts/opinions you have...
I'm not sure. I haven't worked personally with enough adult league pitchers to know if that anecdote is true. What questions do you have that havent been answered by other videos that are (In my view) universal to any pitcher?
@@DanBlewett Great vid by the way; definitely one I'll be watching more than once. I think the difference is with assumptions. For a young kid, one would reasonably assume they are pretty flexible, they've got a lot of time to work on improvement, and they recover fairly quickly. For most adults, I think the opposite is true. They have priorities like family, house, job before baseball. Don't have nearly as much time. And flexibility is very different; especially hip flexibility. For me at least, my arm simply cannot lay back as much as it did in high school. And i can't get as much hip/shoulder separation. And I work on both static and dynamic stretching pretty much daily. There are other adults who work 40+ hour desk jobs who are even less flexible. So I guess my questions would be around things like if there is anything one can do if they can't separate their hip/shoulders well. Stuff like that. And probably more focus on how to reduce the risk of bicep tendonitis
Hi Coach, Thank you for this video. I am wondering if I can get some pointers but hard to explain is there a way I can send you a video. after moving schools and not pitching for couple of months, my sons pitching delivery change and his coach saying its mental is there a way I can send you some video for pointers on whats going on, visual for my son? Thank you so much
Dan Ive taught your throwing elbow is even or slightly above shoulder. I find when you drop your elbow below your shoulder your hand drops and start losing control. I noticed your elbow did end up slighty above your shoulder. Staying on top of the ball adding more accuracy. Just a thought. But very good tutitorial.
I really liked your video my father was a hard hitting minor leaguer from afterWWII to 1960 he butted heads with Branch Rickey and many players that went to the big leagues thought he should have too having said that after his playing days was a scout for the Giants for 23 years also working in player development he was friendly with a pitching coach Red Adams who said a lot of what you are saying uh one thing Red would say about the hand separation was to turn your thumbs down which l see you doing as your hands separate he also liked that front hip glide you demonstrate l am now 78 and still playing l have a pitching machine for fast pitch softball 75 to 80 at 39-40 ft still hit and with power l played a lot of different sports and many of the things you are describing as core values also pertain to other actions including shooting a 3 pointer 2 things l noticed when you pulled your left elbow it was what l call a distinctive move and that move posted your left hip into a very correct position look at the golf swing look at Ben Hogan l noticed that in my baseball/fast pitch swing it opens the door your heel plants and it looks then you push off your back foot your back foot push off l have seen described by an old time golfer Mike Austin it is NOT a squish the bug move on your rear arm it appears that your elbow leads then there is a snap of a release and then the extension of your right elbow with your back side behind it Mike Austin one of the pioneers in kinetics described this when l pitched my back leg finished like yours go back in time Dizzy Dean my 9 yr old.grandson has a lot of coordination and athletism doesn't listen all that well very good throwing action if he comes to it definitely would use your video thanks
Hi Dan. Thx for the detailed breakdown. One thing I am curious about and did not hear was the action of the glove hand returning to the center at release. This is important for consistency. Kids who drop the glove arm down and around towards the waistline have trouble with control. Can you comment on a drill that may help with this? Thanks
I'm not sure what you mean by center, but if by that you mean that its in front of the torso in some way, that's wrong. the glove arm should not return to the center of the body - no one at high levels does that, nor is it good for kids. It blocks the hips from rotating fully. I'm not sure where you heard that, but it's flatly wrong. The glove needs to clear the body, get completely next to the trunk, as I explain, and then it can tuck in compact from there if its the pitcher's preference. But zero high level pitchers finish with their glove in front of their torso.
@@DanBlewett Unless my eyes are deceiving me, and forgive me if I am not explaining it with the proper terminology but your slow motion video of you pitching, clearly shows the glove hand returns towards the torso with fingers pointing upwards after release. All good pitchers that I watch do this. This is opposed to glove falling low and away. Many thanks for responding. Sorry for the lack of clear explanation. 👍
Thanks for this! My son’s bag leg is collapsing to soon and he is not getting a good push. He is releasing the ball too far back in his delivery instead of out over his front knee. It was helpful to see you explain how to keep it straighter. Do you have any drills to help this?
I decided to go on baseball again, it's been 4 years since I stopped so my pitching was really bad. So I thought that it might be good for me to go back to basics.
El pies de la tabla de Verlande a la hora de lanzar esta en el suelo por que da el paso más corto que los demás lanzadores,pero la mayor cantidad de lanzadores dan el paso más largo
Hey coach is there really any benefit pitching from windup vs. pitching from the stretch. I’m coaching my team to mostly pitch from the stretch even when their is no one on base. Your thoughts....
I like to think I have pretty solid mechanics. I had a start a few months ago where I was in the low 80's. And standing in at 5'8 140 and not being particularly strong that feels like a huge win for me. To be fair I came into that start with like 2 months rest. So I was fresh as fuck. I'm not a pitcher primarily anymore but I usually act as a relief pitcher now. My last start I was definitely down in velocity. Probably back to the low 70's
✅My online pitching instruction courses (beginner and advanced) are here: danblewett.com/pitching-isnt-complicated-course/
I pitched from little league to highschool and at age 13 I started to play travel baseball and I played for coaches that played pro or college. So I am thinking about starting baseball lessons. So what do you recommend as for drills standpoint if I am teaching a kid who is starting to pitch?
Coach I give you permission to break down my mechanics as a 52-year-old to compare to a 20-year-old and see what happens over time. th-cam.com/video/4aA5hYM8rq4/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for making this video! I'm an animator and I'm glad there are resources like this to explain movement.
Also, the slo-mo clips are very appreciated.
Coach, I pitched in high school and picked up some bad habits. Now as a coach for the last 18 years I have tried to teach my pitchers proper techniques. One thing I found with the younger kids especially on the hand break is to tell something that a college coach once told me, “ Thumbs to the thighs then fingers to the sky”. It seems to help not only with hand position but also helps to keep their front shoulder closed
Coach, my return to baseball nearly 20 years after I last played it (I'm 32, haven't played since early teens) has led me to discover an aptitude for pitching I never knew I possessed (as a lefty, I was always usually just a first baseman or outfielder), and in doing this my life and my health have improved in ways I could have never predicted. I have been practicing with some basic instructional videos from elsewhere on youtube and that helped me with the general ability to just throw pitches, but I find your videos have the greatest effect on me actually unlocking my potential by giving the most granular examination of the exact things I need to work on while remaining easy to digest. I am still very much a work in progress but your material has already made a huge difference. My fastball recently hit 90 mph for the first time, and I'm able to dot the corners more consistently with each workout every passing day. I now have a healthy obsession with becoming a better pitcher so I will be ordering a copy of your book to further supplement me on my journey. Thank you for giving away freely on your channel what many other teachers would charge a lot of money for, you are a gentleman and a scholar.
thanks for the note, and for watching. Go after it - good luck!
I like this story. I recently tried my hand at pitching as well. I'm having trouble with the feeling of the stretch on the body. Idk how to capture that "powerful" feeling. Any tips from beginner to beginner?
Work work work work
That's great ! Love to see comments like that in many different areas ,...sports, carpentry, writing, ...just anything! Great presentation Coach Blewitt. I've never played BB but been an avid golfer for almost 50 years, and have always been curious on how the mechanics of throwing, but specifically pitching build up the power . Great that you have gotten back into doing something you like, AND with newfound advances in performance 👊. Gonna post more directly to Blewitt
Yes! I used to be a pitcher in my day and am now teaching my son. This is by far the best, most up to date, and comprehensive video I have came across. Gold. Thanks!
Great to hear! Appreciate the kind words!
Are you a wizard?
After watching this video, your batting mechanics video, and just a little practice with friends, I've gone from not thinking I could play baseball in a million years to being fully confident that I could be an above average player on my school's team. Granted, we're only a handful of schools away from being the worst in Ohio, but I'm still glad I can enjoy the sport. I have a full year to practice and hone my skills, and I'm excited for baseball season when it finally comes back around. Thank you for this opportunity
You can do it!! I know you can do it😄. May you always enjoy playing baseball!!
How did tryouts go?
Hey coach, I am a 14 year old starting pitcher trying to learn mechanics and get reallly good. This video is extremely helpful and I feel as im progressing as I should. I am very grateful to have come across your page and you are very kind to have this 38 minutes of mechanics out for free. Highly appreciated
I had 4 pitching coaches when I was young and this was better than every lesson I had
I learned so much from your video for tennis serves. It is such a high quality reference! Most of the videos on tennis are confusing and get lost in the details. To have someone lay out the mechanics of throwing it's much easier to see through the essential parts and ignore the minute details.
This is amazing, I have a 13 year old that throws hard and is a lefty so his coaches want him to pitch. I was Shotput discus guy and did not play baseball competitively. This simplified this and helped me relate this to power positions and rotational energy I used weight throwing in track and field to his pitching. His command is getting so much better now that he has a consistent delivery that he is learning to self correct. Thanks Coach Dan!!
I'm a young pitcher. 11 years old and this video is epic. Really helps me understand. You're da man Coach Dan!
thank you for this video it helped me so much with my pitching stance.
This is the best explanation I've ever heard. Thank you Coach Dan, you really help me understand what to look for.
Happy to help!
This one is the most complete. I play badminton so some principles behind the mechanics are quite similar. I am an assistant coach for my son's team. I thought about using the waist driving the shoulder then the elbow then the wrist. However, the head coach seem to forgot this part when he teaches pitching. Thank you!
I only pitched until i was 18 then joined the military. I was a really good pitcher, wish i stuck with it. Crazy thing is, I'm now teaching my son how to pitch and a lot of what i am teaching him is what you're teaching. I did learn a few new things from you but naturally, i pitch just how you're teaching. I was never taught, never watched videos, there were no videos back then actually. just cool to know what i was doing and now teaching my son was correct. great video
Always nice to discover your a natural! That's great for both you and your son! Congrats to both of you👊
Thank you for your service
Coach thank you for this wonderful pitching
Thanks!
Thank you as well!
I wish I had access to these types of videos when I was younger. In college, I had really bad mechanics which lead to multiple shoulder injuries. I never really had any good pitching coaches that told me what I was doing wrong. Trying to keep a long story short, I moved to Japan thinking I was done with baseball. A guy I worked with had me join his amateur baseball team where the manager was a former minor league pitcher, and he showed me how much I was doing wrong.
Now I am 34, and able to hit 90 on a good day, which is about 5 mph faster than back when I was in college.
It just goes to show how important proper mechanics and coaching are. Young players are lucky to have channels like yours to go to!
thanks for the kind words! Play as long as you can.
I am so jealous of this man he loves pitching so much he has taken this time to deconstruct it an analyze and reverse engineer the entirety of it and then he shares the knoledge!!!!!! I ! Really hope i find smth to feel devotion towards 💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕
I like when he says some things are absolute and others are negotiable, i really like that
nothing is true everything is permitted vibes a lot very much correct
I found this extremely helpful for coaching young players. Thank you for making the video. It really helps to see thia thorough breakdown of what each part of the body is doing from through the delivery.
My 11 yr old who is one of our league's better pitchers, will definitely benefit from working a couple bad habits out of his motion and will likely gain some velocity as a result.
Thanks for this video as a super short pitcher it was hard to understand mechanics from just watching in fast motion but you breaking down every part helped a lot.
Wow thanks! This is really going to help me in my first year of pitching :)
Great to hear!
This is awesome coach thank you for this!
Hi coach Dan, I gotta say that this video complements your book. With both combined I can understand pitching more, so I can explain and demonstrate to kids better.
Great to hear! Thanks for supporting my work - and yes, books are great but it's a challenging medium to describe pitching mechanics in - video is a lot easier than still photos.
I am a disc golfer by trade, I used to play baseball growing up so the mechanics of a forehand have always felt very similar and thus natural. I have been struggling to figure out what to work on since disc golf is a small sport and there really aren't that many good guides about forehand that I feel are helpful at addressing the key mechanics. Instead I find the kind of stuff that you said right at the start of the video you don't like to do, specific advice; does and don'ts when it is all a grey area and learning the basic mechanics can be a lot more beneficial even if it is a lot more time consuming than some quick fixes. Anyway, excellent video I appreciate the simplicity that you explain everything with, makes it really easy to see and feel what your talking about. Certainly has given me a lot to think about and tweak.
Thank you so much, coach Dan, for this excellent presentation! Very helpful!
Glad it was helpful!
Just purchased your book. Thanks for the instruction.
Hope you enjoy it! Thanks for the support!
Much more in depth video coach, thank you for this. You have given me the tools I need to properly teach my son.
The content in this video is amazing. Also, thanks for the chapter breakdown.
You're very welcome!
Darn good stuff in a broad format! Glad you addressed the arm drag issue. I really like your "nothing to undo" comments. Keep up the great work!
I can't verify that every point made is correct, without the baseball or kinesiology background, but assuming they generally are this is maybe the best video I've ever watched on TH-cam. The explanation, the timestamps, the honesty about there being different potential "right" ways, just really, really solid work. Thank you.
in general, anyone who would have qualms with my explanations would be nitpicking, maybe see things slightly different but on the whole not far off. And, looking at slow motion of MLB players on TH-cam is a good way to verify what I'm explaining at different points.
Hi coach! Excelent video, You've helped me so much, I have like 3 years trying to find an adjustable mechanic for me and I couldn't find a good one for me, after starting to see your videos and advices I started to get stronger, and I had a lot of improvement on my mechanics and command. Now I have decent miles and I hope i'll get even better 'cause of your video. THANKS!!
Coach Blewitt, thanks so much for this video. Besudes all the great info and presentation, I'm sure it takes plenty of effort just making the video! I've never been a baseball player but many years a golfer. Started learning the mechanics of the golf swing as a youngster, (I'm 57 now). The amazing power built up by the human body to deliver 100 mph pitches has always fascinated me. In golf, there are 101 things to get right for a)reliable accuracey but then b) power(distance). While the zillion things to get a reliable swing, the power part is , IMHO, way easier in golf than Pitching, for sure. Golfers (after, setup,grip, stance, and initial takeaway,) the big thing is just winding up the big muscles, essentially legs and back. After watching your video,... Dang but there's a lot of moving parts! Again, great presentation and clear information presented in an easy to understand and clear manner. I'm sure you are helping loads of folks progress thier "game". Great work 👊
Thanks Coach! I am coaching a girls baseball club that my students started and I don't know how to pitch. This was so so helpful! Thank you!
Awesome pitching video coach! I keep returning to site to review mechanics. Martial arts expert with a background in sports medicine. You're my go to reference for pitching. I'll check out your books. 👍
Right after you said Cinnamon Toast Crunch was arguably the best cereal ever made I knew I could count on you! You rock man great video
this is an outstanding presentation of mechanics..i wish i had this kind of instruction when i was young--now having moved to golf, pickleball and hopefully tennis there are movements u describe that i know will help me in these other sports..the reason being,though very athletic i carried poor throwing mechanics into other sports..even the 100s of golf Ytube videos i watched didnt help my swing because none of those vids were explained and clicked like yours did..yes i ll be cherry-picking certain movements to apply but i just want to thk you coach..i wish i could roll back the years to my baseball time but at least your expertise will help thousands of kids and coaches...so glad i stumbled onto your site and look forward to viewing lots more..you have a gift of teaching and thks for your generous sharing of your expertise..yes i subscibed..thks again
thanks! Appreciate the kind words
Hey Dan!
I'm a 19 year old swiss who just started playing basebal a few weeks ago, and your video is the PERFECT guide i was looking for. I'm the type of person to look up exactly what I want in detail to do it correctly an in motion from the beginning on (as Electrical Engineering student with heavy emphasis on physics, the physics is just as much pleasure for me). Although I've just started out, I want to learn it in the correct movements as to not develop any bad habits which would be painful to "remove", as I've already experienced in tennis. Your video is exactly the kind i was so hard looking for, so thank you!
I'm the type to learn fast, even though i barely play 2 weeks I'm already hitting balls considerably better than when starting out, which probably comes from already have played tennis for years, and getting an "eye for the ball"
I have 2 questions though as a beginner that I'd like to ask, and that is
1: How should i train throwing across the field, I mean should I apply the same throwing mechanics as in pitching? I understand that it's something different, but nevertheless I'm curious as how you would recommend
2: Is there any suggestion of how to analyse and film myself during throwing/pitching to see what i can/should be doing?
Thanks in advance! Great video
Take video from the side and front. I have an online course that shows you what to do with such video after - it walks you through the analysis and gives you drills to do. But, that may be more for down the road. Use this video for infield throwing (and search my channel for more): th-cam.com/video/P0DhI_d_F2E/w-d-xo.html
Incredibly helpful, Dan. Thank you!
Impressive Tutorial! As a Coach myself and a student of pitching, It’s nice to see science based education that’s explained in detail.
Too many times I come across conventional wisdom that is not based on facts or research!
I’m now a fan and will continue to reference your videos!
Dan, I have scoured the internet for help with understanding pitching mechanics so I can teach the kids on my teams. And this is the best and most thorough resource I've seen. I am gonna hold onto it, and I'm sure I will refer to it time and again. Thank you so much for this awesome resource. The hardest thing for me to understand is the transition between the leg lift and the stride. It seems like right as you get to the top of the leg lift, you want to point the front hip out to lead. At the same time, the lead leg moves down and out toward home plate. And right as it gets to the low point is when you should push with the back leg. Does that all sound right? And when you push, would you say you push as hard as you can or is it a controlled push to some extent? Thanks again from me. Prison Mike, to you!
mostly right, yes - but there isn't really a conscious push - lots of parts of the delivery more or less happen without conscious thought. I didnt cover the stride much in this video, but it really is the result, more or less, of the other things that come before it.
@@DanBlewett Thanks Dan! I really appreciate it. My son is in 12U rec, and we've got about 7 kids on the roster who like to pitch which is awesome. Like I said, this is an excellent resource that I will continue to study and share with others. You are the man!
As far as glove hand movement goes, I taught kids to pull their upper body to their glove to get that upper body torque instead of letting their glove just kind of dangle at their side (I called that "dragging their glove"). I believe this helped with balance of the throwing arm and to increase upper body torque to increase velocity. Was I doing this wrong?
This video is, hands down, the best pitching mechanics video I have ever seen.
No - you're explaining it right. I mention that somewhere in the video, that your glove doesnt really come toward the body, you go toward the glove. But, the glove has to clear the body and get completely left (for righties) of the body. The glove shouldnt stay in front of the torso at all. Whether it tucks compact or dangles doesnt really matter - Pitchers just tend to tuck it because I *think it helps with accuracy
What do you think is the optimum height for a pitcher?
Hey! College pitcher here! I think a lot of points you make here are great for pitchers learning, and you do an amazing job explaining why we do what we do in the delivery. However, I might disagree a bit with the hip tilt. Pitchers should make sure not to lead too much with that front hip, as that will create an uphill tilt of the hips which prevents your hips from rotating on time, and thus stunting the hi shoulder separation. Overall great video!
I subscribed to you earlier in the year and hit it again. Very good. You are so precise with no bs. Big 12 pitcher here. Reach out to me if you think an app can move forward.
Great video that helps with proper sequencing and injury prevention.
Huge thanks. My 10yo 52mph pitcher just came back from his 2nd round of shoulder pain /tendinitis (x-ray said it’s not LL shoulder). His arm pulls back into an obtuse angle.
Im urgently trying to shorten his arm path, and and this video will be extremely helpful.
My only issue is your not giving Honey Oh’s it’s long overdue guilty pleasure credit. Stuff was so good, no thoughtful parent would buy it.
DUDE! I know about honey ohs! Perhaps the most underrated cereal of all time. It was a nerdy, almost off-brand that I don't think anyone knew about.
this just put together so many random pieces for me. I feel like you just made me a way better pitching coach.
lots of stuff that didn't make sense you explained why it was wrong and stuff that did make sense you explained better than I could.
my son has started throwing an unintentional slider and it has been a really tough habit to break. his pitching coach insisted he torque his wrist so the ball faces CF at the fully loaded arm position. seems the answer I have been looking for the past 2 weeks is a neutral wrist and a loaded scap / rotation in the shoulder. thank you!!!!
Time for a new pitching coach
@@OzyMandias13 yup he never got hired again
This is very different than the motion I learned to use. Might be why I had shoulder and elbow issues.
New to your channel and am very impressed. My goal is to use your videos to apply to my 14 year old son. We live in a baseball competitive community and he is trying to achieve the JV team. This will help us tremendously. Do you except videos to break down? Thank you again.
I don’t watch any videos, but thanks for watching
This channel is a life saver thank you for these guides
No problem!
Coach forgive me if i missed it previously, or in a different video, but what is your take on pushing with the ARCH of your foot instead of TOE? i am continuing my baseball career, and would like to freshen up with some ... more "fundamentally sound" training that i can partake in.
Fantastic breakdown for every segment of the pitching mechanics... very helpful... thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the tips!
i’m a tennis player randomly nerding out about pitching right now and it’s cool seeing the similarities in a tennis serve and a baseball pitch. in tennis the tossing arm does the same thing as the glove arm here, and everyone calls it the “reactive brake,” which leads the second half of the motion (the releasing/following through part). nick kyrgios would probably be an insane pitcher. also a slice serve is basically a curveball thrown with a racket, from what i can tell.
glad you enjoyed it. the acceleration phase / release is a lot different. It's shoulder external rotation in a throw, it's significantly more of a tricep extension on a tennis serve. slow motion shows the difference - it's interesting and I did some digging into it years ago.
I'm a youth league rec coach and also working with my 10 year son, who is into his 2nd year of pitching. Enjoying your content and using it to help refresh my approach to the basics. I pitched way back in the day, from 8 to 18 and my throwing arm was ruined by 17. Obviously I needed better information back then but my goal is their safety, #1. My question is on the glove side part of delivery, right around release time frame. What do you think about pulling/tucking glove side arm including arm, eblow, and glove into left peck area of the chest? For example, picture a football player running with the football craddled in one arm? That is how I deliver and noticed my son does the same. We see most of these kids doing way too much around their delivery area and getting off balance. Then their eye line to the target is broken. At this age group we stress accuracy and good mechanics, saving velocity for down the road.
you'll see exactly zero pro pitchers tuck their glove to their pec. it's the wrong way to throw overhand. there is no difference in "mechanics for accuracy" vs "mechanics for velocity" they are the same. the way I explain the glove arm mechanics in this video reflects what 99% of good pitchers do. they're really not personal opinions.
@@DanBlewett thanks for answering my question. Definitely something we will correct. Me and other coaches are trying to address any bad mechanics before the becoming habits. It's some of the kid's first year to pitch. My son does have a good glove hand motion to begin, like you have in the video but was afraid that tucking his arm and glove into his chest was a no go. I also understand what you mean on the mechanics and I wasn't very clear about the accuracy/velocity part of our focus for this age group.
@@DanBlewett also just watched your video on glove side arm and near the end the rules part you have in there. Lol, guess I that would have answered my question. 😂
th-cam.com/video/NbcgV4nGKhE/w-d-xo.htmlsi=v4-WAU9Gk2lZ6Bl5
The hip part is crucial.... Thanks, I never knew that... I was dropping my leg before going down the mound. Found some more speed now! 👍
You bet!
I really do appreciate you you just help me fix something so simple like not leading with my hand and leading with my elbow to get a perfect rotation
Coach, I am a struggling 17 year old pitcher. I was 85-86 my whole high school season and now during my summer season I can barely touch 80. Hoping this can help me! Thank you for the knowledge!
Thx man this is my first time playing and it’s gonna help me a lot
Glad to hear it!
Great video i could never get my shoulders uphill i guess i have bad mechanics. I like the end where you talk about teaching the next gen better than we were taught. Idk y but my coach would change my number every game. By high school i was done with numb fingers. Traveling club team + no internet+ no smart phones= me pitching 5-7 games in a row alternating between my left and right arm. regardless he shoulda known better and single mom always working i had no voice.
Watching this to help improve my tennis since the mechanics of both sports have some similarities.
One of the best pitching mechanics breakdown videos I've seen. I am going to direct all my aspiring youth pitchers to this video as a guide to what we teach on the field. Thanks for putting this together.
Thanks Nick!
You are right on with timing..when you land your arm is getting ready to get on top of the ball...I feel your arm does go quickly into the "drag" straight arm and as you are about to land is where you are getting into that elbow leading action and getting on top of the ball.. working with one who has been throwing 3 + years with long arm action...how do you retrain your arm? In your mind you have to communicate to your arm where to stop going long...good video..is there a way to send you a picture on how to eliminate a "flaw"?
Plenty of pictures have success with a longer arm action.
Coach, thank you very much from Russia for this awesome guide :) Very helpful video!
Glad its helpful to you
Fantastic breakdown. I too, have scoured the internet for pitching and this is the best. I have a sophomore throwing 88, 6'3" and finally realizing his potential. Your breakdown will confirm certain mechanics but was taught to thrown from behind the head. A little more velo but I suspect less accuracy? He's long and lanky so lots of moving parts that he needs to control for consistency. Any tips for long, whippy pitchers or is it just refining and being consistent with mechanics?
its normal to not be consistent at age 16, especially with a big frame. I wouldnt stress too much about it.
Hi...im getting back into baseball..thsnk you❤❤ for bresk it down
Sorry for typo...I voice texting
Great stuff working how many pitches in a workout session and how much test 9 year old
Ok I watched this video and now I feel like I do everything wrong. What order do you think is the best to slowly add all of these tips into my throw?
sorry I have no way of knowing that for any individual person
Coach, Do you think that the windup is used less? If so, could that be the reason for injuries increasing for pitchers?
Insufficient preseason toss and throwing too hard later with an unseasoned arm. My son and I always began soft tossing in January and gradually increased velocity over a period of weeks and months. He never got a sore arm. My daughter refused to season her arm properly and got frustrated because she expected to be able to pitch with control with a week or two prep. She had a strong arm and threw hard regardless of being warned she would hurt. And invariably she would start hurting after a few games. My son played 3 times as many games on multiple leagues; knew his release point, had awesome control and never got sore.
Hey Coach, great video. Do you actively flex your front leg when you land to keep it firm or is there another cue you use? I tend to leak energy into my lead leg. Thanks.
no, you shouldnt think about it. Long toss and running throws help teach your leg what to do. Also throwing uphill - up a mound (the wrong way) or throwing up the back side of the mound can help.
Great video, specially for those of us from other countries who don't get to train with pitching coaches
That's why I made it - I appreciate you all, and hope this can be used as a guide for you
Thank you for your tips! 👏👏👏
I love this video. Mostly the arm path parts + Arm position parts
Great video. Thank you for your information.
CTC is the best cereal, hands down. Whole milk with two ice cubes in the bottom of the bowl. Hella good.
Hey Dan, do you still plan on making some videos geared towards older/adult rec league players?
I'm a 43 year old pitcher myself, and I'm curious because every coach I've ever worked with says coaching adults is a lot different than kids. One said he thinks drills and teaching "feel" is less effective than just simply telling them exactly what movements to make.
Wondering what thoughts/opinions you have...
I'm not sure. I haven't worked personally with enough adult league pitchers to know if that anecdote is true. What questions do you have that havent been answered by other videos that are (In my view) universal to any pitcher?
@@DanBlewett Great vid by the way; definitely one I'll be watching more than once.
I think the difference is with assumptions. For a young kid, one would reasonably assume they are pretty flexible, they've got a lot of time to work on improvement, and they recover fairly quickly.
For most adults, I think the opposite is true. They have priorities like family, house, job before baseball. Don't have nearly as much time. And flexibility is very different; especially hip flexibility.
For me at least, my arm simply cannot lay back as much as it did in high school. And i can't get as much hip/shoulder separation. And I work on both static and dynamic stretching pretty much daily. There are other adults who work 40+ hour desk jobs who are even less flexible.
So I guess my questions would be around things like if there is anything one can do if they can't separate their hip/shoulders well. Stuff like that. And probably more focus on how to reduce the risk of bicep tendonitis
Okay, this was helpful. I definitely can help on this.
@@DanBlewett ah that's awesome. Thanks much! 👍
Hi Coach,
Thank you for this video. I am wondering if I can get some pointers but hard to explain is there a way I can send you a video. after moving schools and not pitching for couple of months, my sons pitching delivery change and his coach saying its mental is there a way I can send you some video for pointers on whats going on, visual for my son? Thank you so much
sorry, its a policy that i dont watch video or give out mechanics advice.
Dan Ive taught your throwing elbow is even or slightly above shoulder. I find when you drop your elbow below your shoulder your hand drops and start losing control. I noticed your elbow did end up slighty above your shoulder. Staying on top of the ball adding more accuracy. Just a thought. But very good tutitorial.
no, that's not correct.
I really liked your video my father was a hard hitting minor leaguer from afterWWII to 1960 he butted heads with Branch Rickey and many players that went to the big leagues thought he should have too having said that after his playing days was a scout for the Giants for 23 years also working in player development he was friendly with a pitching coach Red Adams who said a lot of what you are saying uh one thing Red would say about the hand separation was to turn your thumbs down which l see you doing as your hands separate he also liked that front hip glide you demonstrate l am now 78 and still playing l have a pitching machine for fast pitch softball 75 to 80 at 39-40 ft still hit and with power l played a lot of different sports and many of the things you are describing as core values also pertain to other actions including shooting a 3 pointer 2 things l noticed when you pulled your left elbow it was what l call a distinctive move and that move posted your left hip into a very correct position look at the golf swing look at Ben Hogan l noticed that in my baseball/fast pitch swing it opens the door your heel plants and it looks then you push off your back foot your back foot push off l have seen described by an old time golfer Mike Austin it is NOT a squish the bug move on your rear arm it appears that your elbow leads then there is a snap of a release and then the extension of your right elbow with your back side behind it Mike Austin one of the pioneers in kinetics described this when l pitched my back leg finished like yours go back in time Dizzy Dean my 9 yr old.grandson has a lot of coordination and athletism doesn't listen all that well very good throwing action if he comes to it definitely would use your video thanks
Or on line instructions
thanks bro you help me
Excellent! Thank you for this.
Glad it was helpful!
if I have a kid that is doing all of these wrong.... 8:48 is there something that I should target age range is 12s and 8s
Hi Dan. Thx for the detailed breakdown. One thing I am curious about and did not hear was the action of the glove hand returning to the center at release. This is important for consistency. Kids who drop the glove arm down and around towards the waistline have trouble with control. Can you comment on a drill that may help with this? Thanks
I'm not sure what you mean by center, but if by that you mean that its in front of the torso in some way, that's wrong. the glove arm should not return to the center of the body - no one at high levels does that, nor is it good for kids. It blocks the hips from rotating fully. I'm not sure where you heard that, but it's flatly wrong. The glove needs to clear the body, get completely next to the trunk, as I explain, and then it can tuck in compact from there if its the pitcher's preference. But zero high level pitchers finish with their glove in front of their torso.
@@DanBlewett Unless my eyes are deceiving me, and forgive me if I am not explaining it with the proper terminology but your slow motion video of you pitching, clearly shows the glove hand returns towards the torso with fingers pointing upwards after release. All good pitchers that I watch do this. This is opposed to glove falling low and away. Many thanks for responding. Sorry for the lack of clear explanation. 👍
There are no absolutes.... except that Cinnamon Toast Crunch IS the greatest of the breakfast cereals
TRUE
Excellent video Dan!
Hey Coach im a D3 college pitcher and I was wondering if I could get in contact with you to show you a few videos and get some advice! Thank you
Sorry but I don’t review video
Love ur vids great advice🎉❤
Thanks for this! My son’s bag leg is collapsing to soon and he is not getting a good push. He is releasing the ball too far back in his delivery instead of out over his front knee. It was helpful to see you explain how to keep it straighter. Do you have any drills to help this?
I decided to go on baseball again, it's been 4 years since I stopped so my pitching was really bad. So I thought that it might be good for me to go back to basics.
Here in Brazil, we usually don't have mounds. Should you forget hip tilt on a flat ground mound?
still need it, just not as dramatic like if on a mound.
Definitely correct about Cinnamon Toast Crunch 👍
very nice info for my 12 year old son😀
El pies de la tabla de Verlande a la hora de lanzar esta en el suelo por que da el paso más corto que los demás lanzadores,pero la mayor cantidad de lanzadores dan el paso más largo
Coach, im a 14 year old pitcher and im trying to fix a very late arm action. What do I do?
How do you feel about the riding the rake drill?
don't know what that is.
Outstanding! Love this full video!
Hey coach is there really any benefit pitching from windup vs. pitching from the stretch. I’m coaching my team to mostly pitch from the stretch even when their is no one on base. Your thoughts....
I have videos on this. search my channel
“I won’t speak in absolutes” *2 mins later* “cinnamon toast crunch is the best cereal of all time”
I like to think I have pretty solid mechanics. I had a start a few months ago where I was in the low 80's.
And standing in at 5'8 140 and not being particularly strong that feels like a huge win for me.
To be fair I came into that start with like 2 months rest. So I was fresh as fuck.
I'm not a pitcher primarily anymore but I usually act as a relief pitcher now. My last start I was definitely down in velocity. Probably back to the low 70's
Excellent video thanks