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Hello this is Brent Pourciau at topvelocity.net Iím gonna do a pitching analysis her of Jake,
pair him with some little league footage here of Tim Lincecum. Letís take Jake into his
leg lift and Tim into his. Not bad, Jakeís in a similar position as Tim here, lifted
his leg close, his hipís off, pulling his leg back while he was leading with his hips
a little bit, heís even looking over his glove side shoulder, so very similar. Looks
good.
Take Tim here into the load, as that lift leg comes down he starts to move forward with
it, he build a lot of flexion on the drive leg and as heís moving forward, that knee
is following the front hip. You can see that force vector moving with that front hip, heís
still closed here in the load where that ankle to knee force vector is still in line, heís
ready to launch, so weíll take Jake there as his lift leg comes down his kneeís following
it, heís building some flexion here, letís see, just before launch, about right here,
not a bad position, very similar to Timís. Letís see if Jake can move into some triple
extension, I know itís a little harder for your age group, Tim almost gets triple extension
before he lands, as he opens that front hip before his front foot lands he does get his
hips all the way through, he lands right here and gets triple extension about the next frame
and heís still closed so heís doing a really good job. Kind of tilting over his butt here,
he lands next frame, gets his hip all the way through by finishing that triple extension,
just after front foot and still stays closed to build some torque.
Letís see if Jake can do that. That force vectorís in line, he starts to extend the
knee, he puts down before he gets full extension, he lands here, itís almost through, the problem
is when he pushes through here the shoulderís right there with it, he heads pulling out
too, make sure you keep your eyes on that target. Just before that front foot lands
you wanna try to get that triple extension but if not we still gotta get that hip to
open up just before that shoulder, and I have to say Jake, thatís not bad. If you look
at Tim here, when he lands, heís pretty much all the way through, when you and, you are
pretty much the same, except his arm is a little more closed off than yours. If we had
the angle from the other side we could still see his glove side shoulder, we canít see
yours.
Jake, at your leg lift, see how well youíre leading with your hip and starting to build
some speed forward and build flexion, your first movements though are kind of down, letís
move a little bit more forward as we move down. Get a little bit more momentum in your
forward delivery so that when your front foot starts to break your front hip weíre a little
bit farther off, so if we can just get some speed from the leg lift to the load position
here youíll have a little more speed to really move to triple extension so when you land,
youíll create more hip to shoulder separation because those hips will open up faster and
then delay your shoulders more. So just get a little quicker at the beginning of the delivery
and trying to get triple extension at front foot strike and letís see if that closes
and separates your shoulders a bit more because look where you right here, thatís where Iíd
like to see you when your back leg is all the way extended and youíve completely landed.
Then we get more hip to shoulder separation and your arm will get more external rotation
because you can see that now your arms ready to go you donít really have your elbow getting
through. When that shoulder really takes off and multiplies the force of the hip movement
which came at front foot strike, when those shoulders really explode through, we keep
the arm relaxed, we should get some good external rotation like Tim gets. See how his arm is
straight back here, you need to get youíre a lot more externally rotated because thatís
where youíre gonna get a lot of velocity. Thereís a case study that proves that harder
throwers have more external rotation and more forward trunk tilt, see how Tim is fully externally
rotated and his chest is pushing out over his toes and youíre still standing up and
youíre barely getting any external rotation. That tells me that when your landing, youíre
not building enough torque, your hips and shoulders are just going together, watch your
back hip and back shoulder, see how they move in synch with each other and youíre just
not going to build enough force or speed with your shoulder movement to pull your arm back
like a catapult. Tim does it really well, his hip movement goes first, the hips and
the back leg triple extend and the hips push through and this is just sitting g back here
waiting and then it goes. We donít see that with you Jake, you land and then your hip
and shoulder go together and release the ball so youíre not using the force multiplier
which would be the shoulder; youíre not multiplying the force of your hip speed into your shoulder
speed because you havenít separated your hips from shoulders. Theyíre moving in synch
so therefore theyíre moving together and not multiplying the force of each other, so
we need to get you to separate when the front foot lands to make sure the hips are moving
and not the shoulder and then once the hips are through then the shoulder goes. Thatís
really gonna be the key for you and itís something thatís not easy to learn but youíre
at a great age to really get better at it, understand it and eventually apply it into
your delivery. So thatís why you really need to get the 3X pitching velocity program because
the beginnerís guide goes through the basics of this and gives you some great beginner
drills and training to begin to really understand the 3X approach, to develop pa little more
power and speed though your stride through the triple extension and then really convert
that to hip to shoulder separation so that you can put yourself in a high velocity category
so then you can see that itís very possible for someone for your age. There is Tim Lincecum
when he is 8 or 9 who has almost very similar mechanics to what he has today and you can
see that heís a high velocity pitcher, even at that age.
So, I would recommend you get on the program and just start again at it and youíre gonna
put yourself in a great position because youíre gonna be a lot more way ahead of the game
by the time you get to high school. Appreciate you sending the video and I hope this helps.