Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Shoulder Alignment

 

My name is Coach Skip, and you’re about to learn “balance” in pitching.

Bad Alignment

Out-of-line Shoulders naturally take your motion out of balance and your Throwing Arm compensates for your imbalance.

Great Alignment

As you move into your release, your Shoulders being in line your target keeps your motion in balance.

There’s no conflict and your Throwing Hand naturally sends the ball right to your target with uncanny regularity.

How To Accomplish This?

Want to know more about your Shoulders?

The Pro Pitching Institute teaches you to manage your Shoulders, or your instruction is free … No questions… No hassles… and no hard feelings.

Coach Skip Fast
“The Pitching Process Doctor”
Pro Pitching Institute
+1-856-524-3248
skip@propitchinginstitute.com
http://propitchinginstitute.com
#ElitebyChoice

Copyright © 2022, Pro Pitching Institute.

Wednesday, December 21, 2022

One Motion

 

When you place your weight in front of your Back Foot and with the correct Glove Arm action, your Lower Body gets involved.

My name is Coach Skip, and you’re about to learn “balance” in pitching.

Bad Command

When you place all your weight over your Back Foot, your Foot Strike initiates your Throwing Action.

Your Throwing Arm produces your location, and your command gets spotty.

Great Command

However, when you place your weight in front of your Back Foot and with the correct Glove Arm action, your Lower Body gets involved.

Throwing Action reacts to your Stride, and your ball ends up in the target with uncanny regularity.

How To Accomplish This?

Want to know more about your weight distribution?

The Pro Pitching Institute teaches you to manage your weight, or your instruction is free … No questions… No hassles… and no hard feelings.

Coach Skip Fast
“The Pitching Process Doctor”
Pro Pitching Institute
+1-856-524-3248
skip@propitchinginstitute.com
http://propitchinginstitute.com
#ElitebyChoice

Copyright © 2022, Pro Pitching Institute.




Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Foot Positions

An ideal Front Foot distance is one baseball width away from your Back Foot.

 My name is Coach Skip, and you’re about to learn “balance” in pitching.

Bad Placement

The more distance between your Feet, the greater chance you naturally create an imbalance.

An imbalance causes your Throwing Arm guides your pitch.

Good Placement

An ideal Front Foot distance is one baseball width away from your Back Foot.

Combines this with an ideal Front Foot Lift and the ball goes to your target with uncanny regularity.

How To Accomplish This?

Want to know more about your foot placements?

The Pro Pitching Institute’s Self-Coaching Plan teaches you to manage your Feet, or your instruction is free … No questions… No hassles… and no hard feelings.

Coach Skip Fast
“The Pitching Process Doctor”
Pro Pitching Institute
+1-856-524-3248
skip@propitchinginstitute.com
http://propitchinginstitute.com
#ElitebyChoice

Copyright © 2022, Pro Pitching Institute.

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Starting Positions

Starting Position

 I’m Coach Skip and I teach a natural pitching process built to deliver a much larger portion of your pitches directly to your intended target.

Bad Starts

When you end your Starting Position with your weight over your Back Foot, you end your stride, then release your pitch.

Your Throwing Hand works alone and the likelihood your ball goes to your target decreases exponentially.

Good Starts

A better Starting Position has your weight balanced just in front of your Back Foot.

Your Glove Hand activates your Hips, pulls your Throwing Arm into release, and your ball goes to your target with uncanny regularity.

How To Accomplish This?

Want to know more about your weight distribution?

The Pro Pitching Institute’s Self-Coaching Plan teaches you to manage your weight, or your instruction is free … No questions… No hassles… and no hard feelings.

Coach Skip Fast
“The Pitching Process Doctor”
Pro Pitching Institute
+1-856-524-3248
skip@propitchinginstitute.com
http://propitchinginstitute.com
#ElitebyChoice

Copyright © 2022, Pro Pitching Institute.