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Posted at 8:18 PM, 7/22/2011
he Super 8 Hitting System Solution:
First, let us understand the direction the ball comes to us. A pitcher launches the ball from a 10-inch mound and because he is elevated, the ball comes to the hitter diagonally down. If you visualize a ball coming to a hitter on a downward plane, and the hitter also swinging on a downward plane, the hitter has only one chance to intersect with the ball on contact.
So where is the adjustment? We do not swing down. But we do go down. By driving to the ball diagonally down, keeping our hands above the ball, and the bat head above the hand as we pivot (drive), this puts us in perfect position to make the best contact. We then invert the bat so that the top hand goes under the stroke, then goes diagonally up.
This perfectly matches the pitch. We go to the ball diagonally down, and our stroke goes diagonally up. NEVER do we want the bat head to point to the ground after contact. If that happens you will usually see a pop-up because the bat will hit the face of the ball rather than the core of the ball.
In my days as a pro baseball player, I trained under a hitting coach that instructed us step forward if the pitch is straight down the middle, step outside if the pitch is outside, and to step inside if the pitch is inside. Sounds simple right? Sure, except it's anatomically impossible to do.
The problem is that against good velocity, there is absolutely no way for a hitter to wait until after he determines the direction of the pitch before he takes his stride. He will always be late getting to the pitch and will have extreme difficulty with his timing.
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