rudedawg
New member
Got DOT's e-mail on the routine you set up for him and wanted to first say very nice.
I did offer him another exercise to do for the obliques: Not sure what they are called....... I used to call them doing my beach muscle routine before I found out that they didn't do well for the V look. Anyway we used to sit on the floor with our legs bent, lean back at a 45 degree angle and then take a medicine ball or a plate and start on one side and take the plate to the other side and touch it to just outside your hips. Nice and slow and deliberate.
On another note I am setting up pitching camp for the organization that I coach my sons teams in and ran across this article.......Let me know what you think. On first look it seems right on the money but I am not anywhere close to a Physics or Kinetics major or whatever major covers these types of thing:
The damn link won't work for some reason but here is the basics of the article:
How Poor Conditioning Can Actually De-Train A Pitcher And Create Mechanical And Performance Problems
I have said this a number of times. Back ten years ago and before that, there was no weight training in baseball. And pitchers still threw hard and in my opinion they had fewer arm injuries. The fact is that weight room training can actually de-train a pitcher. And we already know that it can cause injury. Keep in mind that throwing is a high speed movement if not the highest speed athletic movement there is. Weight room training on the other hand is very slow and controlled.
So what happens is you are training the muscles to work at a slow and controlled rate? So that's how they will want to respond. And besides that the weights are artificially supported by a bench or a machine instead of being supported by the body.
A pitch is a very complex movement skill that occurs at some 7500 degrees per second from different joint angles and must be performed at the correct sequence and time... "
I did offer him another exercise to do for the obliques: Not sure what they are called....... I used to call them doing my beach muscle routine before I found out that they didn't do well for the V look. Anyway we used to sit on the floor with our legs bent, lean back at a 45 degree angle and then take a medicine ball or a plate and start on one side and take the plate to the other side and touch it to just outside your hips. Nice and slow and deliberate.
On another note I am setting up pitching camp for the organization that I coach my sons teams in and ran across this article.......Let me know what you think. On first look it seems right on the money but I am not anywhere close to a Physics or Kinetics major or whatever major covers these types of thing:
The damn link won't work for some reason but here is the basics of the article:
How Poor Conditioning Can Actually De-Train A Pitcher And Create Mechanical And Performance Problems
I have said this a number of times. Back ten years ago and before that, there was no weight training in baseball. And pitchers still threw hard and in my opinion they had fewer arm injuries. The fact is that weight room training can actually de-train a pitcher. And we already know that it can cause injury. Keep in mind that throwing is a high speed movement if not the highest speed athletic movement there is. Weight room training on the other hand is very slow and controlled.
So what happens is you are training the muscles to work at a slow and controlled rate? So that's how they will want to respond. And besides that the weights are artificially supported by a bench or a machine instead of being supported by the body.
A pitch is a very complex movement skill that occurs at some 7500 degrees per second from different joint angles and must be performed at the correct sequence and time... "