Good stuff. I threw in mid 90s back in the day in late 80s, early 90s (Ray gun not Jugs) and your recommendations are spot on. Like a hitter, it's all in the hips and the arm is just in it for the ride. At least that's how it should feel. Had the wonderful experience of having a bullpen session with legendary Sandy Koufax and he had some great ideas back then on staying back and then creating force to3ards home plate
Thanks Dan! This video helps me understand the timing of the back leg drive a little better. I watch guys like Noah Syndergaard and even some youth pitchers who almost seem to jump off the rubber. And I'm not sure if that's appropriate for my 11/12 yr olds.
Hey question since it’s going into the fall and I’m really starting to take pitching seriously how would you construct a program for over the winter so you can be ready in the spring to pitch your best I’m going into 14u by the way. Great video thanks
@@KickChangeDeathBall - I would not say that it is a no no, but I would also add that it probably does not add much, if any, to arm delivery speed, because at stride foot plant, the lower torso's work is finished, allowing the upper torso kinetic chain contribution to kick in. But, then again, maybe that maneuver increases upper torso counter-rotation which could conceivably contribute something to arm speed. Dan's the pitching guru here. I would go with his determination.
Dan Blewett I learned so much from this first video . I throw 70 off the field , but when I get on the field I can only throw 55. It’s a mixture of nervousness and confidence
What are your thoughts on a player who only pitches from the stretch? I would imagine that there is some advantage or benefit because all of the mechanics of the delivery stay the same no matter if there are runners on or not. But at the same time if it really was that much better then everyone would be pitching that way.
I think if a player doesn't have the coordination to throw strikes from the wind up, which is pretty darned simple, he doesn't have a chance at being a good pitcher, anyway
I know this is a year ago, but it seems like guys with a high leg kick and upright starting position do make 100+ more often as opposed to guys who sink into a glide throwing 94-96 mph. Any thoughts?
Hi Mr. Blewett. I am a 12 yr old pitcher. I am just wondering if it would be bad to use a half leg kick when I pitch. Does it lower my velocity or do something bad to my velocity or something. Thank you!
Hi Coach My son is 9 and just started playing. When picking up the leg, should he stay tight in the core or keep loose? It seems like him and other kids lose their balance at the spot with the leg up and come wild to the plate. Also, is the slide step used for when runners are on?
Hi Dan. Is there a preferred or most effective stride foot landing distance/angle for 12-15u players? I’ve always taught that the toe points midway between 3rd and home for righties when the foot lands and then as the hips/torso square up, everything should be driving to the plate but I wasn’t sure if there was a proven science in stride foot landing.
Stride length is generally 80-100% of height but it’s a product of the mechanics as a whole so it’s not advisable to just try to get a kid to stride longer; fix the things that might cause a short stride. Nor is it one size fits all. For angle of the toe I have a video on landings and generally I agree the toe should be pointed at home or slightly to third.
@@DanBlewett perfect! Thank you for your help! I enjoy your approach to teaching and your book, “pitching isn’t complicated”. Attempting to open my own baseball academy here in TN and align a lot with the lessons you teach on here. That’s how I have taught for years to my little leaguers and travel teams. Have a great one.
so does my leg kick have to go straight up or can i maybe have an inside leg kick if that makes sense? like it’s not too inside just i don’t really feel comfortable going straight up and i didn’t know if that was bad or not
Good stuff. I threw in mid 90s back in the day in late 80s, early 90s (Ray gun not Jugs) and your recommendations are spot on. Like a hitter, it's all in the hips and the arm is just in it for the ride. At least that's how it should feel. Had the wonderful experience of having a bullpen session with legendary Sandy Koufax and he had some great ideas back then on staying back and then creating force to3ards home plate
Pretty cool feedback from a pro pitcher, you were very close to the majors Bill!
This is great. I was really lost on how the landing part of the leg kick should be.
Thanks Dan! This video helps me understand the timing of the back leg drive a little better. I watch guys like Noah Syndergaard and even some youth pitchers who almost seem to jump off the rubber. And I'm not sure if that's appropriate for my 11/12 yr olds.
6:11
In the background a car runs over ......
I have to teach some kids (and some dads) the windup. This video helps. Thanks!
my full windup video is here: ua-cam.com/video/3M8_1GTPm68/v-deo.html
Find the heal hook is leading to pitchers to create momentum that leads to over rotation to the left or right of the target line to home plate.?
Thanks!!
You bet!
Tks
Hey question since it’s going into the fall and I’m really starting to take pitching seriously how would you construct a program for over the winter so you can be ready in the spring to pitch your best I’m going into 14u by the way. Great video thanks
Idk why buy my pitches seem more accurate and faster when I lift my leg higher but definitely could be a placebo.
The height of the leg kick is probably a personal mental thing, because I cannot see a mechanical advantage gained from a higher leg kick.
agree. we'd have seen it by now if it was a think, and the slide step position would be a velocity killer, which it isn't.
What about the kid crossing his leg over at the apex of the leg kick ? Is that a no no or does it matter ?
@@KickChangeDeathBall - I would not say that it is a no no, but I would also add that it probably does not add much, if any, to arm delivery speed, because at stride foot plant, the lower torso's work is finished, allowing the upper torso kinetic chain contribution to kick in.
But, then again, maybe that maneuver increases upper torso counter-rotation which could conceivably contribute something to arm speed.
Dan's the pitching guru here. I would go with his determination.
Yeah I'd agree with what Chad said - a little crossover is fine, too much is too much.
That early separation is exactly what my son is currently doing...trying to fix it but he's stubborn.
You earned my subscription
I wont let you down.
Dan Blewett I learned so much from this first video . I throw 70 off the field , but when I get on the field I can only throw 55. It’s a mixture of nervousness and confidence
What are your thoughts on a player who only pitches from the stretch? I would imagine that there is some advantage or benefit because all of the mechanics of the delivery stay the same no matter if there are runners on or not. But at the same time if it really was that much better then everyone would be pitching that way.
I think if a player doesn't have the coordination to throw strikes from the wind up, which is pretty darned simple, he doesn't have a chance at being a good pitcher, anyway
@@DanBlewett that was harsh dude lol. I think he might of been looking for an reason why people dont?
@@loudoo8582 I don't know if his comment is entirely accurate anyway. Even Yu Darvish pitches exclusively from the stretch.
I know this is a year ago, but it seems like guys with a high leg kick and upright starting position do make 100+ more often as opposed to guys who sink into a glide throwing 94-96 mph. Any thoughts?
Hi Mr. Blewett. I am a 12 yr old pitcher. I am just wondering if it would be bad to use a half leg kick when I pitch. Does it lower my velocity or do something bad to my velocity or something.
Thank you!
usually lowers velocity
Hi Coach
My son is 9 and just started playing. When picking up the leg, should he stay tight in the core or keep loose? It seems like him and other kids lose their balance at the spot with the leg up and come wild to the plate. Also, is the slide step used for when runners are on?
Don’t over think it. And yes - slide step for runners on.
Hi Dan. Is there a preferred or most effective stride foot landing distance/angle for 12-15u players? I’ve always taught that the toe points midway between 3rd and home for righties when the foot lands and then as the hips/torso square up, everything should be driving to the plate but I wasn’t sure if there was a proven science in stride foot landing.
Stride length is generally 80-100% of height but it’s a product of the mechanics as a whole so it’s not advisable to just try to get a kid to stride longer; fix the things that might cause a short stride. Nor is it one size fits all. For angle of the toe I have a video on landings and generally I agree the toe should be pointed at home or slightly to third.
@@DanBlewett perfect! Thank you for your help! I enjoy your approach to teaching and your book, “pitching isn’t complicated”. Attempting to open my own baseball academy here in TN and align a lot with the lessons you teach on here. That’s how I have taught for years to my little leaguers and travel teams. Have a great one.
so does my leg kick have to go straight up or can i maybe have an inside leg kick if that makes sense? like it’s not too inside just i don’t really feel comfortable going straight up and i didn’t know if that was bad or not
I dont know what you mean
He means his leg that is raising is coming back towards 2nd base while up.
Maddux was a heal hook/leg sweeper.
and?
@@DanBlewett And then the other guy fell down because he swept his leg and Maddux unleashed with "ground and pound".
you're 2 for 2 on comments that make no sense
@@DanBlewett They don't make sense, but they do make dollar bills...
@@DanBlewett And nothing...It was an observation. Did you expect something else??? I'm sorry I noticed something that you are already aware of.
Whatever it takes to get your body moving from a stand still!! That is what matters. Do whatever works.
no, not really. there is definitely good technique vs bad. "whatever it takes" is a stupid way to coach players.
If you need more pitching help, grab a copy of my pitching manual (4.8 stars on Amazon) ✅ 👉 amzn.to/2Kdon9G
4.6 stars now.
Proves its a good book since it hasn't really gone down a whole lot in 2 years.