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HSBBWeb Old Timer
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| Posts: 4402 | Location: Canada | Registered: October 13, 2005 |    |
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Member
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Listen, not every pitcher is a robot. There are a thousand drills out there that can help/hurt you. Throwing across your body can hurt your arm, it takes the hips out of the equation and directs the brunt of the stress on your shoulder and elbow. There's a buffer area of about six inches on each side of straight where it's "okay", but keeping track of drifting further out is something you may have to do. If you feel restricted now, and you're young, it will only become more and more difficult to get to the proper release point throwing too far across your body. I would suggest picking a drill or two that you feel helps your muscle memory, but the main thing I would do is throw/play catch along a football yardline or something to that effect...if your back heal is at 90degrees to your target, you will find out how far across your body you're throwing by looking down at the line and your landing foot. I throw across my body, but only a couple inches...it's okay, but something to keep an eye on if it gets to be too much. Good Luck
"One of the beautiful things about baseball is that every once in a while you come into a situation where you want to, and where you have to, reach down and prove something." Nolan Ryan
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| Posts: 33 | Location: Baton Rouge, LA | Registered: February 01, 2006 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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quote: Originally posted by Chad Durbin: There's a buffer area of about six inches on each side of straight where it's "okay", but keeping track of drifting further out is something you may have to do.
Is this fact or is this your opinion? If it's fact can you point me to the studies that discuss this? quote: Originally posted by Chad Durbin: I would suggest picking a drill or two that you feel helps your muscle memory, but the main thing I would do is throw/play catch along a football yardline or something to that effect...if your back heal is at 90degrees to your target, you will find out how far across your body you're throwing by looking down at the line and your landing foot.
So if I land my stride foot close to the line I'm not throwing across my body? It's that simple? Does that also mean that my hips have opened? Jason
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| Posts: 1000 | Location: Tennessee | Registered: June 13, 2003 |    |
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