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DELIVERY
It is important that every pitcher has an understanding of how a sound delivery looks and feels and also has the ability to teach it.
It is the most important aspect of getting the most out of your ability. A sound delivery and control (or location) of pitches are the same thing.
Why is a solid delivery so important?
- Generate optimal hand speed through release
- consistent velocity
- Impart the maximum spin on baseball
- movement of fastballs
- spin on breaking balls
- Keep the upper and lower body in sync (together) to release ball at consistent point
- Limit arm injuries
- Great confidence building
- easier to make self-adjustments in games
THE SIX AREAS OF A SOLID DELIVERY
It is not the intention of this program to clone pitchers and make all of them throw exactly alike.
Body type and natural arm slot are different for everyone; however,
there are six areas of the delivery on which detailed time is spent:
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Stance/Transfer
- body upright, relaxed, exhale
- weight always on glove side foot (in wind up)
- ball in hand in glove in front of body
- transfer is simply taking weight from glove side foot
and shifting it to throwing arm foot
- soft center (see the "big picture")
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Rocker Step
- Glove side foot takes short backstep directly toward
2B
- If you work your hands above your head, you must get
them there in this phase; however, it is preferred
that hands stay in front of chest.
-
Lock Pivot
- Pivot foot must lock in at the front of rubber before
any weight goes forward
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Balance
- knees "brush"
- pick balance leg up with quadricep muscle
- relax lower leg
- very slight flex in pivot leg (do not drop or sit)
- shoulders parallel to ground
- hand position varies (flow guys and hand stop guys)
- no body weight "drifting" or leaking to plate
- head and eyes on location (still soft center)
- thigh parallel (or slightly higher) to ground
- foot on balance leg directly below knee
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(5) Break/Approach
(3 things - (A) Lead Arm (B) Ann Swing (C) Stride)
-
Lead Arm (glove arm) gets away from body but
maintains closure (tunnel)
- THE HANDS ACTUALLY LEAD THE BREAK/APPROACH PHASE
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Lead Arm
- Arm swing straight down-back up (towards 2B)
- Arm swing complete (elbow above shoulder)
when stride placement hits (very AmEort^itJjL
- Fingers stay on top of ball during the
entire arm swing
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Stride
- Stride foot actually needs to go down toward
pitching rubber before going to stride placement
- Stride placement with foot closed (knee
inside ball of foot)
- no body weight
outside front leg
- "Stay back" (body weight 70% back when
stride hits) - stride leg is slightly
flexed
- Extreme location concentration (fine
center) occurs when stride hits ground
(Power Phase)
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RELEASE/FOLLOW THROUGH/FINISH
- from "Power Posistion" take chest out to meet glove
- hand speed to consistent release point
- quiet head - eyes focused on location (fine center)
- stride leg becomes firm now (throw against front leg)
- back heel to sky
- chest out over lead leg
- keep glove to heart and front shoulder closed (it
will open when it has to)
- finish balanced, square to the plate
- hand outside of front knee
Click Here for some Delivery Drills
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