Do MLB Hitters "Squish the Bug?"

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 8 окт 2024
  • The best hitters in baseball don't squish the bug as part of their swing. What do they do instead, to develop powerful swings and consistent hitting mechanics? 🚨 My New Book, Clean Your Cleats 👉 amzn.to/3evISyN
    --
    🚨 My New Book, Clean Your Cleats 👉 amzn.to/3evISyN
    ⚾️ Pitching Isn't Complicated (pitching book) 👉 amzn.to/3EzMHBo
    📚 Dear Baseball Gods, My 2nd Book 👉 amzn.to/2WXlzmB
    ✅ My Pro Routines Program 👉 danblewett.com...
    Email me a question 👉 danblewett.com...
    FREE Pitching Webinar 👉 danblewett.com...
    💪 Free Trial of my baseball strength program 👉 earlyworktrain...
    ✅ My Online Pitching Courses 👉 courses.danblew...
    📺 Free Mental Skills Webinar 👉 danblewett.com...
    📫 Sign Up for My Baseball Emails 👉 www.danblewett...
    🎙My Podcast 👉 danblewett.com/...
    ⚾️ Watch my FREE Curveball Course Playlist 👉 bit.ly/curvebal...
    👉 📄 PDF Download for the course is here: danblewett.com...
    -- -- -- -- -- --
    [DISCLAIMER: Some links above are affiliate links to products that I will earn a small commission on if you purchase, at no additional cost to you. I am a member of the Amazon affiliates program and may present links to other affiliate programs.]

Комментарии • 34

  • @DanBlewett
    @DanBlewett  2 года назад +6

    What do you think? Is teaching players to squish the bug wrong?

    • @brentwebb1947
      @brentwebb1947 Год назад

      Good for power hitters. Buy u want a slap, good drive or poke. What ever. I think what ever is working for the hitter and not changing up their stance year after year after year. That's the problem.

    • @brentwebb1947
      @brentwebb1947 Год назад

      So, like you said. Stop the video. So it's stopped and looks like squashing the bug. But yes, the momentum, of course, with the hips and continuing with it through the strike zone. Of course your going to be on the ties at end. The fact is do not take the swing and just wipe the hips. Bug is squashed. I look at all the power hitters in baseball. Load, eyes seeing and relaying, and turning on it. Pretty simple

    • @RobertJohanssonRBImGuy
      @RobertJohanssonRBImGuy 8 месяцев назад

      it is

  • @mattwest8146
    @mattwest8146 2 года назад +3

    Great point coach. So many kids are taught improper techniques in baseball.

    • @DanBlewett
      @DanBlewett  2 года назад

      Absolutely - we're all still learning and getting better as coaches, so hopefully this keeps that going.

  • @Pecosbill7
    @Pecosbill7 8 месяцев назад +1

    When my son was playing Little League I took him to a hitting instructor. The instructor emphasized “ knee, hip, shoulders” with “knee” meaning a pivot on the back leg. After my son started high school and playing baseball there I decided it was time for me to play hardball again and joined a Men’s Senior Baseball League program. For many years I used the “knee, hip, shoulders” approach and even utilized the same hitting instructor. I could hit the ball with power, but not like I had done when I was younger. I attributed this to just aging (I was 50 at the time). I noticed two things and couldn’t figure out to address them. (1) if you just try to rotate your hind leg with the foot still planted in the ground, your spikes make it nearly impossible to fully pivot on your back leg. (2) By trying to just pivot on the back leg I was unable to swing the bat with a full range of motion. The only way I could bring the bat all the way around was to let go of it with my right hand on the follow through, which also brought down my power. When I finally figured out what was going on I emphasized bending the knee and dragging the toe as opposed to trying to pivot with the foot still flat on the ground. My power went up significantly as a result as my weight shift is more complete and both my hands can stay firmly on the bat during the follow through. Thanks for posting this excellent video.

  • @cwj9202
    @cwj9202 2 года назад +6

    Excellent points. Squishing the bug prevents the hips from fully engaging during and contributing to the swing. Decades ago, Dusty Baker, unfortunately, was a proponent and a spokesman for that less-than-optimal approach.

    • @DanBlewett
      @DanBlewett  2 года назад +1

      it can still help youngsters who have their back foot stuck to the ground (hips not rotating at all) but once they stop doing that, then its time to stop squishing the bug for sure. no place for it at even medium levels of amateur baseball

    • @uchihadabba699
      @uchihadabba699 2 года назад

      @@DanBlewett I have heard that squish the bug was not a good concept and I stay away from it. But it has been so hard to get my 10 yr old son to move that back hip that I had to go to it. I don’t plan on stressing this idea beyond but it helps

    • @cwj9202
      @cwj9202 2 года назад +1

      @@Ireland831 -- I didn't say he didn't know hitting. I just emphasized that he taught the "squish the bug" concept, which the vast majority of HOF hitters did not follow. The remainder of his teachings was great. With younger kids, it is often very difficult to get them not to squish the bug--no big deal, as when they become older, stronger, and more athletic, they master the issue easier.

  • @k1ndh1ln
    @k1ndh1ln 2 года назад +2

    Great for t ball and peewee baseball, but kills the hip rotation needed to generate power, or at least reduces power quite a bit.

  • @brentwebb1947
    @brentwebb1947 Год назад

    Exactly what u just said. the power momentum shifting it.

  • @markstrohecker2111
    @markstrohecker2111 2 года назад +1

    I think this a primarily a youth baseball thing (7-10u) when you are trying to get lesser players to swing the bat and rotate their hips. The better players will naturally do it correctly. They are just coaching to the lowest caliber player and unfortunately it is a phrase that sticks

    • @DanBlewett
      @DanBlewett  2 года назад +2

      We saw a lot of players have poor back legs well into high school. Im not sure as many players have high quality back leg actions as you assume.

  • @retayuan123
    @retayuan123 Год назад

    Was that Harper, Josh Donaldson, and Soto?

  • @cowboy15
    @cowboy15 2 года назад +1

    the goal is to shift momentum from back hip to the front with front leg blocking into the ground. "Squish the Bug" is just a bad terminology to explain the rotation of hips when starting a swing. maybe "pivoting the back knee' is a better explanation, but not as a catchy. at contact, how the back foot looks is not as important. some hitters have their back foot stepping behind their hip after rotating, for example, Miguel Cabrera.

  • @dblankenship88
    @dblankenship88 2 года назад +2

    Squish the bug has been outdated for a very long time.
    Sadly though we have people like Jeff Frye that promotes a squish the bug product and then consistently discredits anything he doesn’t agree with.

  • @trickwheel
    @trickwheel 2 года назад +2

    I feel the squish the bug is more for getting the youngsters used to staying balance and keeping the head in there during the swing. It seems to keep a level swing while opening the hips. Later after repetitive practice and learning to transfer the weight in a balanced manner they can adjust to a more forward transfer with a drag. In contrast to that, if you teach to drag the toe you will get a lot of off balance swing or a lot of balls chopped in front of the plate. Whether it right or wrong is debatable, but anecdotally I have seen improved hitting at early teen ages staying back and pivoting.

  • @wojak91
    @wojak91 2 года назад +1

    Good video

  • @jacobcotto6291
    @jacobcotto6291 2 года назад

    What is an optimal "feel" technique to initiate proper rotation of the hip instead of "squish the bug"?

    • @DanBlewett
      @DanBlewett  2 года назад +1

      Drag the toe would work well.

  • @RobertJohanssonRBImGuy
    @RobertJohanssonRBImGuy 8 месяцев назад

    Hips are located in the legs and wont rotate.

  • @brentwebb1947
    @brentwebb1947 Год назад +2

    It's the momentum bringing the back foot in. But still squashing the big technique. Watch Albert, Judge and Stanton. They squashing the bug but their power is going to shift it forward. Perfect example. Albert P. Stays loaded and just turns them hips. Absolutely power and Squashing it.

    • @brentwebb1947
      @brentwebb1947 Год назад

      Power hitters can just sit back/load, wait and turn on it. My daughter is a power hitter 14A ball. She sits back/loads, waits and turns on it. Squashing the bug but understand ends up on the toes sometimes (the force). She not slap hitting lol.

  • @06racing
    @06racing 2 года назад

    It still is a good way to teach kids the hip rotation.
    I remember that it increased my hitting power by about 20%.
    Was barely able to make it over the infield's heads to over the outfield's heads easily.
    Then I took a few years off and couldn't hit because the kids weren't throwing anything in the strike zone, but were still getting called strikes.
    Eye level and a mile outside is not a strike.

  • @brentwebb1947
    @brentwebb1947 Год назад

    It is squashing. It just force from his body bringing it in some

  • @ariwarnicke-smith2984
    @ariwarnicke-smith2984 2 года назад

    "Squishing the bug" is just a term that kids can relate to which is why its still used in teaching the fundamentals of the swing. 7-10 is the appropriate age for this particular gem of the past for sure. Keeping it fun, competitive and relatable is the most effective way to teach kids. "Saving the bug" may be more appropriate but most kids are squishers not savers!