Sunday, December 25, 2016

Are you addicted to mis-informaton?


Unless you have the stomach to embrace facts that directly contradict what you hear, think and believe, you're wasting your time reading any further.

Check this out!!!
Drew Westen, an Emory University psychologist, and his colleagues proved that when you reject facts contrary to your beliefs, your brain lights up like an addict when they get a fix.
Therefore ...
-  Regardless of the facts, you're programmed to believe what you believe.
-  The positive physical response you receive when you reject contradictory facts builds upon your drive to reject any conflicting data???
You're hardwired to discard information that contradicts your beliefs.

To improve, you need to overcome the urge to reject facts contrary to your beliefs and begin focusing on how your body actually works.

When you make a throwing action without aiming at a target, your energy naturally flows from your lower body, up your core and into/out of your throwing hand.

As soon as someone places a target a few feet away, everything changes.

When you miss your target by an unacceptable distance, common sense has you thinking you can simply change your next outcome by changing your arm slot... but you CAN'T really control your throwing arm path?

How do you control your throwing arm path?

As soon as you realize you must abandon your “common sense approach” and begin managing the messages your mind’s “built-in response mechanism” sends to your brain will you gain complete control over...

  1. Your throwing arm path,
  2. Your next pitch release window and
  3. Your ability to challenge every opponent to drive your next pitch.

Until you embrace the fact that your your “common sense approach” doesn't work, you'll continue to struggle with your command and, at the same time, you make yourself a Tommy John risk.

To make yourself next level ready and injury resistant, contact me.



L.A. "Skip" Fast
Independent Major League Pitching Coach
Pro Pitching Institute

856-524-3248


“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”

Command comes from the top of your front leg lift.

Throwing arm balance 
makes sustainable fastball command a physical impossibility!

What the collective baseball community wants you to believe!

It really isn't “what the collective baseball community wants you to believe”, it's more about the collective baseball community not addressing your hip orientation at the top of your front leg lift. 

When you complete your front leg lift with your hips off your target line and/or tilted, your mind's “built-in response mechanism” uses your throwing arm for balance.

The throwing arm path you want your throwing arm to take conflicts with the throwing arm path your mind's “built-in response mechanism” wants your arm to take.

No matter how hard you try, the common sense thought that you can control your throwing arm path can't overpower your mind's “built-in response mechanism”. 


Contact me to discover the simple adjustments that’ll free your throwing arm to produce sustainable fastball command.

L.A. “Skip” Fast
Pro Pitching Institute
skip@propitchinginstitute.com
  

“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”


Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Is your lower body really engaged?

Teaching lower body engagement as an "action" makes sustainable fastball command a physical impossibility!


What the collective baseball community wants you to believe!

The collective baseball community abuses your trust in them when they let you believe “you engage your lower body when, 'after' your front foot makes contact with the ground, your throwing arm pulls your back hip forward”.

To experience the sustainable fastball command associated with actual lower body engagement, your lower body rotation occurs 'before' your throwing arm comes into release.

When you see your back hip come forward as a result of your throwing arm pulling your back hip forward, the drag from your back hip naturally expands your release window.

To experience sustainable fastball command, we teach you how to make your ball release a reaction to a predetermined glove side hip tilt at foot plant.

Contact me to discover the simple adjustments that’ll get your hips to pull your throwing hand into release.

L.A. “Skip” Fast
Pro Pitching Institute
skip@propitchinginstitute.com


“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Are you pitching in the "present" or the "future"?

A focus on your foot placements keeps you in the present.

Before we explore your "footwork", let's talk about pitching in the "past" and "future".
Pitching in the Past 
Being in the "past" – You're pitching in the past when you say to yourself “I need to adjust my arm slot.”  Observation and Interpretation - You missed your last pitch high and left.  You need to do something to get your next pitch back to my target. You're pitching in the past, not in the present.
You have as much control over your next pitch as you did your last.  What are you going to do to get your next pitch back to your target?  Are you going to use your last pitch to guide what you’re going to try to do with your next pitch?
You're pitching in the past, not in the present.
The Solution – To pitch in the present, you condition your “subconscious” to generate the consistent movements that make a naturally productive result more likely than not.
Pitching in the Future 
A “future” example – When you say to yourself “This hitter is really good.”, you're pitching in the future.
Observation and interpretation – When you think about adjustments you have to make on your next pitch, you're pitching in the future.
You have no control over your results.  What kind of plan to you have to make a quality next pitch?  What are you going to do get your next pitch to break extremely close to the plate?  No matter your grip or release, how are you going to show the hitter a fastball arm speed? Having no control over you results forces to you pitch in the future.
The Solution - To pitch in the present, you condition your “subconscious” to generate the consistent movements that make a naturally productive result more likely than not.
Lesson learned – Pitching in the “past” or “future” forces you to not only compete with yourself, but compete with your opponent as well? 

Heck, competing against the opposition is hard enough.  Why compound the issue by competing against yourself?

A focus on your foot placement before your lift your front foot off the ground is simple.  Not only does your foot placements keep you in the present, but your foot placements automatically produce Tommy John-resistant, dominant fastball command.

Ask me to help you with your footwork.

L.A. "Skip" Fast
Independent Major League Pitching Coach
Pro Pitching Institute 
856-524-3248



“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”


Sunday, May 22, 2016

Is your current motion a Tommy John risk?

Your current pitching motion makes you a Tommy John risk, but comes with an upside.

What makes me feel you're at risk for a Tommy John procedure?
Your current delivery produces many acceptable results, but even occasionally seeing any one of these 3 warning signs not only make you a Tommy John risk, but point to solutions that'll make you competitive advantage at the highest levels.

  1. You “rush” your deliver.- “Rushing” is your body's unhealthy adjustment to your throwing arm not being available to instantly respond to your “stride”.
  2. You change your arm slot. - Changing your arm slot is the unhealthy conflict between your mind demanding to have your throwing hand move through a healthy arm slot and your drive to make your arm slot produce more acceptable results.
  3. You miss your target outside your catcher's body much too often. – You’re missing your target outside your catcher’s body comes from the unhealthy conflict between your naturally healthy and naturally unhealthy arm slots.

What causes throwing arm injuries?
Throwing arm injuries come from the repetitive actions that cause small throwing arm ligament tears and fraying.

What does a healthy throwing arm action look like?
Every time you make a throwing action without consciously aiming at a target, your energy naturally flows from your lower body, up your core and into/out of your throwing hand.

How does something so simple have such grave consequences?
Simply put, you become a Tommy John risk when your naturally healthy release window fails to consistently find your target.

What do you do to make your command more acceptable?
You simply keep your current pitching motion intact and then change your outcomes by changing your arm slot.

Is changing your arm slot to change your pitching outcomes healthy?
Absolutely not!
 
When you begin your motion in the same way, to make sure you stay healthy and without concern for your results, your body wants to channel your energy from your lower body, up your core and out your throwing hand.
But wait, when you change your arm slot to improve your results, you redirect your natural energy flow away from your throwing hand. When you simply change your arm slot, your energy stops in your throwing elbow and creates the small ligament tears and fraying that typically make you a Tommy John risk.


What's the solution?
Your solution is a win-win proposition
...
your solution is the dominant fastball command that give
s you absolutely no reason to
change your naturally healthy, total spontaneous and extrem
ely effective energy flow.
Your solution is a win-win proposition
...
your solution is the dominant fastball command that give
s you absolutely no reason to
change your naturally healthy, total spontaneous and extrem
ely effective energy flow.
Your solution is a win-win proposition … your solution is the sustainable fastball command that gives you absolutely no reason to change your naturally healthy, total spontaneous and extremely efficient energy flow.

How do you do this?
Without having to change your current throwing action, we spend a few minutes together to address and resolve the disruptive actions creating your naturally unhealthy energy flow.

L.A. "Skip" Fast
Independent Major League Pitching Coach
Pro Pitching Institute 
856-524-3248



“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”


Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Are you using your legs?

When you keep your legs connected to your upper body, you  produce sustainable fastball command.

At foot plant, your "mind's built-in response mechanism" sense a glove side imbalance. 
- To get your body back in balance, demands your "mind's built-in response mechanism" you make a throwing action.
- Your spontaneous throwing (re)action makes your location a non-issue.
- No matter your grip or release, by throwing through your target you opponent see fastball arm speed and late ball movement.
Since you're using your body the way it was built to work, calling upon your  "mind's built-in response mechanism" to produce your results makes your delivery injury resistant.
When you use your throwing arm for balance, your "mind's built-in response mechanism" releases your throwing arm to complete your delivery after your feet are back on the ground and your weight is back in balance.
- Your throwing arm works independently from your lower body. - Your throwing arm having to drag your back hip forward expands your target area.
- Your natural energy stops in your throwing elbow or shoulder.
- The small ligament tears created by your natural energy misdirection makes you extremely injury prone.
Dominance, movement, deception and arm health make keeping your lower body connected to your upper body a must for all driven pitchers.

Ask me to show you how to keep your lower and upper bodies connected.

L.A. "Skip" Fast
Independent Major League Pitching Coach
Pro Pitching Institute 
856-524-3248


“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Do you end with ONE Spontaneous Throwing Reflex?


One spontaneous throwing reflex comes comes from keeping your throwing arm free to react to your lower body activity at foot plant.

You keep your body in balance in one of two ways ...

  1. You use your arms for balance or
  2. You use your lower body for balance.
A coach who teaches you (lets you) use your throwing arm for balance...
  1. Delays your throwing arm from responding to your hips at foot plant, 
  2. Expands your release window and 
  3. Corrupts your results.
 A coach who teaches you to use your lower body for balance...
  1. Keeps your throwing arm free to instantly respond to your hips at foot plant, 
  2. Brings your throwing hand through a consistently tiny release window, 
  3. Produces stellar results and 
  4. Keep your throwing arm structure intact and Tommy John resistant.
Ask me to show you how to use your lower body to drive your dominance.

L.A. "Skip" Fast
Independent Major League Pitching Coach
Pro Pitching Institute
856-524-3248
   
“My simple, yet extremely powerful, business rule: fix it once and move on!”