A Hitting Lesson with Edgar Martinez

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 181

  • @alanlee67
    @alanlee67 3 года назад +33

    I remember watching in the 90s when Seattle would have a rod, Griffey, and Edgar. That's quite a lineup. Randy Johnson...in the Kingdome. The 90s were the best

  • @andrewwest7360
    @andrewwest7360 6 лет назад +90

    One of my absolute favorite players growing up...Definite Hall of Fame player

  • @antoniojimenezjr57
    @antoniojimenezjr57 5 лет назад +32

    When I was little he was playing winter league in Puerto Rico and before a game he was signing autographs, they made us get in a single line and only one autograph per kid, I had 5 baseball cards so I got in line 3 times and before Signing my 3rd one he laughed and said “ this is your 3rd time in line how many you baseball cards you got? I said 5 he signed the rest of them so I didn’t have to keep trying to get in line again, one of my favorite players of all time, so happy he finally got the call

  • @Jack3dBrett
    @Jack3dBrett 6 лет назад +139

    what a time we live in. so much knowledge at our fingertips.

    • @DonBienveRosario15
      @DonBienveRosario15 5 лет назад +5

      Crazy right?

    • @MIKExVICKx7
      @MIKExVICKx7 3 года назад

      ?

    • @r.a.tackey3230
      @r.a.tackey3230 3 года назад

      research hebrew cosmology

    • @jlopez1017d
      @jlopez1017d 3 года назад +2

      A lot of bad hitting coaches out there too trying to revolutionize the wheel. Uppercut swings are trash stay in the zone as long as you can

    • @seandafny
      @seandafny 3 года назад

      Yes

  • @TheAlaskaalex
    @TheAlaskaalex 6 лет назад +178

    So many people teach you growing up that the back foot is the anchor and it should never move, only rotate. But the best Right handed hitter and DH of all time just blew all that dogma away. Balance and feel and transfer of power to the front foot let's the back foot move and keep the hips strong to hit for power to all fields. Edgar is a genius.

    • @armychowmein8021
      @armychowmein8021 6 лет назад +2

      Trevor Story has the same kind of back foot slide as the Gar. But he's a pure pull hitter. I think it has more to do with the Gar's approach to hitting overall and the sliding foot merely gives him more "bat in the zone" time. I also recall Kyle Seager talking about how the Gar was coaching him to always think oppo against the FB which therefore allows for off speed pitches to still be met by the bat within "the zone" CtheZ.

    • @unclestinky6388
      @unclestinky6388 6 лет назад +6

      You can see Henry Aaron slide his back foot a little on the video for #715. Mike Schmidt and Gorman Thomas are two other old skool power hitters who also did something similar. I remember briefly trying it when I was a kid after I saw Schmidt do it. I should have stuck with it.

    • @cheddarbob7540
      @cheddarbob7540 5 лет назад +5

      Squash the bug though, right? Lol. The beauty of hitting - or teaching the art of hitting - is that there really isn't just one way to do it. It truly depends on the athlete. Of course you can change up routines or implement new drills or try to change body patterns/sequencing or build new muscle memory, among other things. All of that can be true. But the truth is - not all successful hitters move their bodies in the same way during their swing. You can certainly point to specific core principals that all successful hitters have in common, but that doesn't necessarily mean they all arrived at the point of contact in the same way.

    • @RickDesotell
      @RickDesotell 5 лет назад +2

      @@unclestinky6388 watch the 1971 all-star game and you will see several examples of hitting off front foot.

    • @krakenmetzger
      @krakenmetzger 5 лет назад

      Altuve's back foot flies all over the place too.

  • @br2024
    @br2024 6 лет назад +63

    The all time greatest DH. The damn award is NAMED after him!!! Get Edgar in the HOF!!!!

    • @abrahangomez6816
      @abrahangomez6816 4 года назад

      🤡🤡🤡🤡 big papi

    • @brody2087
      @brody2087 3 года назад +6

      @@abrahangomez6816 1. Ortiz wouldn’t have had a career if it weren’t for Edgar
      2. Edgar is still a better hitter than him

    • @abrahangomez6816
      @abrahangomez6816 3 года назад

      @@brody2087 what?

    • @A3Hoops
      @A3Hoops 3 года назад

      @@abrahangomez6816 it’s true Ortiz was actually a Mariners prospect too lol

    • @davidarcelay9924
      @davidarcelay9924 Год назад +1

      Edgar way better hitter than David Ortiz, if you know about the sport, then shouldn’t be no doubts…..

  • @swordMechA
    @swordMechA 2 месяца назад +1

    Growing up I watched the Angels, but i always tried to catch the Marines strictly to see this guy bat. Massively underrated hitter of our time.

  • @westonstevens3239
    @westonstevens3239 5 лет назад +58

    As a Mariner fan, I always thought that Edgar was the greatest student of hitting I've ever seen, while Griffey was the greatest natural hitter I've ever seen.

  • @courtneyvaldez7903
    @courtneyvaldez7903 5 лет назад +15

    One of the greatest right handed hitters of all time, finally got his due from Cooperstown. It's incredible to thing what his numbers would've looked like if he'd gotten playing time before his late 20s. Maybe 450 hrs, 3000 hits, close to 2000 walks, as many RBIs as David Ortiz, and, just maybe, the record for doubles. The dude was born to hit. I despise the DH, but Edgar was just so damn good at the hardest thing to do in American sports, how can he be denied?

    • @GlennTheSadMarinersFan
      @GlennTheSadMarinersFan 5 лет назад +4

      dude is handicapped as well. I think its ok to bring it up since it involves his eyes. incredible what he could do.

  • @wadeboshiverson
    @wadeboshiverson 6 лет назад +132

    It’s a damn shame he’s not in Cooperstown yet

  • @drizzle452
    @drizzle452 6 лет назад +22

    That’s absolutely fascinating and contrary to pretty much everything I’ve ever learned, but he’s got a point-that swing path does seem to stay in the strike zone longer and flatter with the back foot moving back. Like Byrnes pointed out, that is really difficult to duplicate for a lot of people. It just goes to show you that there is no “one size fits all” methodology to hitting.

    • @RickDesotell
      @RickDesotell 5 лет назад

      elbow in and palm up is the key with the back arm

    • @chrislewis5069
      @chrislewis5069 Год назад

      I think the thing I noticed with the back leg moving is it’s used on balls your more likely to roll over on like outside pitches and breaking balls.

  • @Aves0225
    @Aves0225 6 лет назад +8

    I am amazed by this unique but worked so well for him

  • @kingtrav
    @kingtrav 6 лет назад +16

    So jealous of kids who have these videos to watch to improve their game. Wish I had stuff like this when I was growing up!

    • @justincarbone8715
      @justincarbone8715 5 лет назад +1

      I was just thinking the exact same thing. You can basically have coaching from All-Stars and Hall of Famer just one click away. Amazing.

    • @cbanks1980
      @cbanks1980 4 года назад

      Man!

  • @hm2ls869
    @hm2ls869 3 года назад +2

    MLB network where is the 1-hour long hitting instruction series?!? This needs to be a permanent fixture on the net work and needs to have great majorly hitters from history breaking down how they did what they did. Please make this happen.

  • @kfeder76
    @kfeder76 5 лет назад +18

    Cooperstown came a calling! Congrats Edgar!

  • @preston0808
    @preston0808 6 лет назад +26

    Loved watching the mariners growing up with Edgar, Griffey, and all the others. But I've never actually heard Edgar speak until now. I know his last name is Martinez, but he looks like an American long haul trucker. It made me laugh to hear his Puerto Rican accent.

    • @Yanikleko
      @Yanikleko 6 лет назад +3

      pzcanada was born in New York, but grew up in Dorado, Puerto Rico.

    • @preston0808
      @preston0808 6 лет назад

      Yanikleko makes sense

  • @sea4our
    @sea4our 3 года назад +4

    had the lucky pleasure of watching this man spend his entire career in my city/my gf little brother knows his son. i'm not quite sure if people realize how much of a hitting machine Edgar really was. the dude used to do this hitting drill where he'd write numbers on the ball and he wouldn't hit it unless he could read the correct number

    • @matthewandrews3883
      @matthewandrews3883 Год назад +1

      How would he be able to read a number on a ball that was spinning?

    • @thomaslemon3971
      @thomaslemon3971 Год назад +1

      ⁠​⁠​⁠@@matthewandrews3883 They described it a bit off. Edgar’s right eye wanders, so as a strengthening exercise, they would launch tennis balls through a pitching machine. The balls had numbers written on them, and he’d track them as far as he could until it was out of his peripheral, trying to identify the numbers. They were written in multiple spots on the ball. The funny thing is, other people attempted his drill, and had trouble reading the numbers even when the machine was set to 20mph. He’d take it up to 130mph sometimes!
      Absolutely incredible, his dedication. Before him, the DH was a way for an older player to hang on a couple more years. He took the position to the extreme. I am a BIG fan if you can’t tell 🙃

  • @wbdrugstrat
    @wbdrugstrat 6 лет назад +14

    If the NFL can have punters and kickers in the hall, the MLB should have DHs. Edgar was a hitting machine.

    • @EchoesDistant
      @EchoesDistant 3 года назад +2

      Also in the MLB case, Closers and other relief pitchers.

  • @senatorlainez
    @senatorlainez 3 года назад +3

    Edgar, by far one of my most favorite players ever. And this is coming from a Dodger fan too. That M's team with Junior, Olerud, Tino, Edgar, The Unit was just insane.

  • @lunchb0x_x119
    @lunchb0x_x119 5 лет назад +4

    One of the Greatest Right hander hitter of all time.

  • @lb2779
    @lb2779 Год назад

    What a genius this man is, in his second language expertly conveys to the youth how to perfect the most minute detail of swinging a bat.

  • @positively_broad_st3780
    @positively_broad_st3780 5 лет назад +8

    Edgar is the freakin' man!

  • @blackspokane4497
    @blackspokane4497 5 лет назад +1

    Edgar needs to be in the Hall of Fame - MLB has an award named after him

  • @roronoakora4861
    @roronoakora4861 2 года назад +1

    Hands down the most beloved Mariner of all time.

  • @MantrostTonyRojas2012
    @MantrostTonyRojas2012 5 лет назад +1

    When he was an active player i spent hours looking at his swing and i was surprised in his sweet swing. I wondered how easy look to hit the ball for him. Sweet, elegant, and effective batting swing!! i got frustraded i could´nt get to that!!

  • @userloco99
    @userloco99 3 года назад +1

    if u want to pull the ball don't move the back foot, if u want to spray the ball to all fields move the back foot. Thanks Edgar, that help me a lot on my swing and it works.

  • @bengaltiger96
    @bengaltiger96 4 года назад

    All that fuckin time and I never noticed that backstep. Crazy. I love these masterclasses.

  • @CSXBRO
    @CSXBRO 5 месяцев назад +1

    Edgar my man

  • @angierivera7305
    @angierivera7305 3 года назад +1

    Edgar was a pure hitter.

  • @teddyramaphala1284
    @teddyramaphala1284 4 года назад +1

    I've been an avid fan of Edgar since early '04.. Never actually heard him speak before...

  • @davidscott7626
    @davidscott7626 6 лет назад +8

    Edgar Martinez is one of the greatest hitters of the modern era, if not all time. The fact that they don't wanna put him in the HOF because he was primarily a DH is simply laughable.

    • @GlennTheSadMarinersFan
      @GlennTheSadMarinersFan 5 лет назад

      imagine if he didn't have the eye problems. crazy

    • @matthewandrews3883
      @matthewandrews3883 Год назад +1

      @@GlennTheSadMarinersFan and imagine if he played in his early 20s as well like JR and AROD did.

  • @TheSolver-PR
    @TheSolver-PR Год назад

    Now I'm learning this after giving up on hitting!

  • @eddiejansen3771
    @eddiejansen3771 3 года назад

    Best hitting video I've watched

  • @geobrah1957
    @geobrah1957 4 года назад

    Most elite hitters release the pressure on the back foot and end up on their front foot, with their back heel up, toe in the dirt- some slide the back foot forward in the “weightless part of their swing. To actually move that back foot in the way Edgar did is very unusual, and a real eye opener!

  • @zoznack
    @zoznack 3 года назад +1

    What a stick Edgar was. And he seems like quite the gentleman, too.

  • @armychowmein8021
    @armychowmein8021 6 лет назад +17

    This doesn't explain why Trevor Story, who has the same movement with his back foot, is a pure pull hitter... I think it has more to do with the Gar's overall work ethic and approach to hitting.

    • @MrCplChicken
      @MrCplChicken 3 года назад +4

      It doesn't mean you're going to automatically spray the ball all over the park just because you do this movement. Obviously there are many mechanics involved in a swing. The point is, it puts your body in a better position to do so.

    • @jamescurth701
      @jamescurth701 3 года назад

      Story isn’t, normally he leads the league in home runs on low outside sliders.

    • @Garrett1240
      @Garrett1240 2 года назад

      That’s because Edgar hit just as much with his back foot not jutting out as he did when it did. Story pretty much always just his back foot out

  • @Shinobi33
    @Shinobi33 3 года назад +1

    I'd love to see him manage one day. Edgar is a true old school Hispanic baseball gentleman

  • @TheGammingPie
    @TheGammingPie 29 дней назад

    Edgar has one of the most purest swing in the history of baseball! i swear he could hit home runs in his sleep...

  • @commomcents
    @commomcents 6 месяцев назад

    That back leg movement makes perfect sense,but you have to know your abilities to,give that a try.What seperated Edgars elite hitting ability was his visual,acuity and ability to lay off of bad pitches.Dude was a stud bc he strayed in his hitting zone with that barrel longer than most and squared up balls more often than not and hammered those hanging off speed pitches as well...One of the best ever,period!.

  • @Rabbit14A
    @Rabbit14A 6 лет назад +4

    You definitely should do one with Ichiro

  • @NPRThatBlueCrayon
    @NPRThatBlueCrayon 4 года назад

    The core stretch with this swing reminds me of how slapshots are preformed in hockey!

  • @stevevandien310
    @stevevandien310 4 года назад

    Edgar was superb. If he didn't have the most beautiful right-handed swing of all time, it was damn close.
    And this great hitter knew his craft up, down and sideways. Knew how to work a pitcher until he got a good ball to hit, while fouling others off. Knew when to hit straightaway, when to go after a dinger by pulling.
    Had eye trouble for many years. Countered it with strenuous eye exercises and bunting against a tennis-ball machine, which sent the spheres at WAAY over 100 mph. 150ish --

  • @Jesusisyhwh
    @Jesusisyhwh 3 года назад +1

    As a Mariners fan, I can ask "Who doesn't love Edgar?"

  • @worldofwisdom617
    @worldofwisdom617 5 лет назад

    This dude is awesome

  • @JW-dy8ru
    @JW-dy8ru 7 месяцев назад

    The back leg stepping back, I just noticed Ronald Acuna Jr doing the same thing.

  • @dape8993
    @dape8993 6 лет назад +27

    Great material. Destroys that "squish the bug" garbage taught by amateur coaches. One piece of advice: Eric Byrnes should talk less and allow the guest to talk more!

    • @Northeastbaseball
      @Northeastbaseball 6 лет назад +3

      S"Squash the Bug" never worked for me. Once I hit about 12 I figured out that that phrase actually hurt my swing more than help it.

    • @Real_David_Joseph
      @Real_David_Joseph 6 лет назад +2

      dape
      True.
      You dont really even HAVE to step into a ball to hit it well.
      Just make solid contact and transfer your weight from the back foot to the front foot, right before you make contact.
      I actually never even realized before I saw this video, but this movement with the back foot that Edgar is demonstrating here, I naturally do this movement with my back foot too!
      Sweet!

    • @knucleballfreedom
      @knucleballfreedom 6 лет назад

      Well Dusty Baker came out with that book, squish the bug, wish I never read it.

    • @gouda2177
      @gouda2177 6 лет назад

      I agree about Byrnes, but he can't help himself , hes hyperactive

  • @TheBoodog1
    @TheBoodog1 5 лет назад

    Well also look at his front foot and where it lands when he’s driving the ball the other way. 1992 American League batting champ

  • @MidwayGuy
    @MidwayGuy 3 года назад

    Makes it sound so simple

  • @richie.edwards
    @richie.edwards 2 года назад

    A legend

  • @somerandomguy84
    @somerandomguy84 5 лет назад +5

    There were literally people who were skeptical of him being in the hall bc he was a DH. Dumb!

  • @eddierivera8556
    @eddierivera8556 6 лет назад +4

    the best DH!

  • @babc4323
    @babc4323 6 лет назад +2

    EEEEEEEEDDDDDDDD-GGGAAARRRRR!!! Long live the Mariners!

  • @keeganramjit8111
    @keeganramjit8111 6 лет назад +10

    mike trout does this too

  • @palomagarcia4721
    @palomagarcia4721 5 лет назад +2

    el mejor en la caja de bateo

  • @Thesdlefty1
    @Thesdlefty1 2 года назад

    Masters class!

  • @Polymath29
    @Polymath29 5 лет назад

    Exactly on what he was saying on the back foot moving forward. So many players are taught to stay back, and that's not going to work

  • @jboyo58
    @jboyo58 5 лет назад +2

    Everyone: nobody can hit a homerun that’s in the wall
    Edgar: hold my beer

  • @jimtroclus
    @jimtroclus 6 лет назад +2

    It is time to rebuild the Mariner in Franchise mode

  • @AztecWarrior595
    @AztecWarrior595 6 лет назад +7

    Javy baez does it too

  • @stoneshire645
    @stoneshire645 3 месяца назад

    There is lots of old footage of Henry Aaron using this exact same hitting technique.

  • @LancerJak
    @LancerJak 5 лет назад

    Sweetest right handed swing ever.

  • @bartfox9187
    @bartfox9187 6 лет назад +1

    Scooter Gennett does this too . but his foot goes toward the catcher.

  • @lb2779
    @lb2779 Год назад

    I thought about how Barry never moved his back leg. I think little implements like this determine the makeup of the hitter. This man took personally being in batting title contention, meanwhile a slugger usually will want to be a bit more short and a sense of balance. Many different ways to be great in baseball, play to your advantages.

  • @jaydee5447
    @jaydee5447 5 лет назад +4

    Introduce him with some respect....the HOF Edgar Martinez

  •  5 лет назад +2

    The back step is mental help. The best way is transfer the dynamics of the vectors to achieve contact in the final convergence. Example, T. Gwyn, D. Jeter also E. Martinez. in fact Edgar's step back is not as pronounced as that of Altuve and Cabrera. This technique is not the perfect foundation but a practice that makes these players have adopted as mental reinforcement.

    • @Garrett1240
      @Garrett1240 3 года назад +2

      I've noticed that those who move their back foot away from the plate during their swing have noticeably less open hips at the point of contact. I believe this is largely responsible for why they appear to hit less home runs than say a Mike Trout, Cody Bellinger or Freddie Freeman. These three exemplify the hitting style that predominates today and which I think is best suited to hitting homers, generally speaking, and perhaps deep line-drives too. These three , when at the point of contact all display rather open hips, little-to-no bend in the front knee/leg, and a slight back lean of the torso to get their hips out in front so that the sort-of 'unloading' process can be realized realized. The physics behind this type of hitting approach is much like a top when made to spin by our hand. To make a top spin fast enough to stay upright is impossible without first 'cocking' our wrist in one direction before unloading it back in the other, thus creating the conditions for the top to be spun with great enough velocity to remain upright for some period of time. When the pitcher is in his throwing motion the batters gather potential energy by slightly positioning their backs and to a lesser extent hips/glutes towards the pitcher creating the necessary displacement for a violent uncoiling. Foot, then hips begin to swing open followed by the torso which will naturally want to lean back to compensate for the lower half quickly accelerating out and away from one's center of gravity. This symphony of efficient movement creates the necessary force and acceleration to barrel the ball. Flaring out the back foot is usually a way to mitigate a number of shortcomings such as short stature (Altuve), loss of quick twitch speed due to age (Cabrera), or simply a batter just feels more capable of making contact by choosing not to maximize power through the hitting mechanics described above. A back foot sliding out and making some contact with the ground will act like a rod in a wheel's spokes by obstructing the body's ability to uncoil and 'swing-open' the midsection ever-so, hampering the power one can generate in theory.

  • @golfmaniac007
    @golfmaniac007 2 года назад

    when edgar talks about batting, you listen. edgar had such great bat control. jarred kelenic should takes some lessons from him. jarred is pulling everything.

  • @jamesy4003
    @jamesy4003 5 месяцев назад

    The best hitter that never owned a mitt

    • @seattlewa8500
      @seattlewa8500 2 месяца назад

      Not true. In 1990, 1991 and 1992 he played 3rd base for the Mariners. In 1994 he was moved to DH because of injuries and he remained the DH the rest of his career.

  • @yunghanhuang8188
    @yunghanhuang8188 3 года назад

    this is crazy, another Ichiro

  • @baileysmith4744
    @baileysmith4744 4 года назад +1

    to think the Mariners had Ichiro, Vogelbach, Cruz, Haniger, Segura, and Gordon, yet they cant even make post season. Marlins x2

  • @MajorChipHazard16
    @MajorChipHazard16 4 года назад

    My dad used to get PISSED when me or my brothers would move our back foot when we were batting

  • @joaquinayala9665
    @joaquinayala9665 5 лет назад

    Que paso con edgar martinez el periodista de univision

  • @jason64bit19
    @jason64bit19 3 года назад

    Jack Clark used to do this 30 years ago

  • @user-ck5hp1cy8o
    @user-ck5hp1cy8o 6 лет назад +3

    Kids are lucky nowadays

  • @joseberrios5970
    @joseberrios5970 5 лет назад +1

    Are players in the MLB who have the ability to hit the ball in different
    Ways to the opposite of the field.
    But went you talk about a baseball player with all ability and discipline. than everybody knows who's his name.# 11 edgar
    Martinez .

  • @birdchatterbaseball2024
    @birdchatterbaseball2024 6 месяцев назад

    not the back foot. Its the front foots step over when he lands that causes that making it very hard to fly open.

  • @pdple9476
    @pdple9476 3 года назад

    Yuli Gurriel just won a batting tittle with the same approach at the plate.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 2 года назад +1

    Miguel Cabrera is great, one of the best. He’s still no Martinez though. Still HOF for sure.

  • @ihavesoul4real
    @ihavesoul4real 5 лет назад +2

    Unfortunately Mike Zunino has never hit over .230 in any season during his career

  • @max66bhs77
    @max66bhs77 4 месяца назад

    Listen to Edgar, "I approach middle of the field." That means you don't pull every pitch. The back foot comes off the ground at contact. Shocking, but not really.

  • @peterwyattmiddleton
    @peterwyattmiddleton 7 месяцев назад

    Hank Aaron did that back foot thing a lot

  • @daveerhardt1879
    @daveerhardt1879 5 лет назад +1

    4 minutes before Edgar talks, typical MLB.

  • @the_stewbear
    @the_stewbear 5 лет назад +1

    That looks a lot like Roger Federer's backhand footwork

  • @bmcjr42
    @bmcjr42 2 года назад

    This is Roberto Clemente style

  • @mrwoody1413
    @mrwoody1413 3 года назад

    Non baseball people don’t understand how hard it is to hit a baseball

  • @lochnessmonster5149
    @lochnessmonster5149 3 года назад

    There's nothing revolutionary about any of this. Edgar didn't do anything different than hitters before him.

    • @seattlewa8500
      @seattlewa8500 2 месяца назад

      He was just a better hitter than most of them.

  • @smilesolutions4all
    @smilesolutions4all 6 лет назад +2

    😍

  • @theoweller2662
    @theoweller2662 5 лет назад

    The dude closest to the screen looks like old josh donaldson

  • @rovinsingh4698
    @rovinsingh4698 6 лет назад

    Edgar with the bat in his hands here looks a lot like the Babe

  • @reinubeton
    @reinubeton 4 года назад

    Ask mariano rivera about this gentleman

  • @nephi30
    @nephi30 4 года назад +1

    People over complicate the athletic mechanics of power. Load and release. In Baseball there is throwing and hitting. When a pitcher throws the ball, their back driving leg is off the ground at the point of release. In hitting the back leg is either spinning or comes off the ground for a moment depending on where the pitch is they are trying to hit. This results in maximum force. You can just twist at the trunk if you want, but the power will be diminished. NOTE: This is simple...but not easy to master as it takes thousands of swings and pitches to develop and train the brain and the body to maximize force under control.

  • @staciemohler4624
    @staciemohler4624 3 года назад +1

    113th comment

  • @davestephanieanderson9503
    @davestephanieanderson9503 6 лет назад +1

    Sup

  • @balkee42
    @balkee42 3 года назад

    Dude on right looks like marty mcflys dad

  • @hectorrivera7686
    @hectorrivera7686 3 года назад

    Eso quiere q altuve y cabrera le robaron la movida a martienz y todavia dicen q ortiz fue mejor q el ustedes esta bn loco ,ese tipo es una bestia edgar es edgar el mejor siempre sera el papa

  • @alecmcjarison999
    @alecmcjarison999 6 лет назад

    Where is the mlb network headquarters?

  • @maikelrodriguez1142
    @maikelrodriguez1142 2 года назад

    Marcel osuna,Bruce harper do the same thing

  • @chacmool2581
    @chacmool2581 4 года назад +1

    That dude with the blue suit and bad haircut talks too much.

  • @alneri9041
    @alneri9041 3 года назад

    Everyone from NY voted thumbs down

  • @GG-lr3gv
    @GG-lr3gv 3 года назад

    What I will say is when you’re stronger, it’s easier to control the bat. Everything in hitting comes down to your ability to control the bat through the hitting zone. Edgar gained an advantage from juicing, but I won’t deny he has knowledge on how to be a great hitter.

  • @diego7447
    @diego7447 6 лет назад +1

    who cut their hair?