Learn the correct head position, keeping the head still, and seeing the ball better while hitting a baseball or softball. Discover how in this Albert Pujols swing breakdown.
People always want to know how to hit the ball harder, with more consistency. And it all starts with how the head moves during the swing. Who better to look at for consistency than Albert Pujols, AKA “The Machine”…
According to Baseball-Reference.com, a few key offensive stats based on his 162-game average are:
Albert Pujols may not be the same hitter he was with the Cardinals…BUT…what he has working for him is friction-free head movement during the swing. An oftentimes, misunderstood topic.
In this video post, we’ll hold head movement during the swing to the fire of science:
SCIENCE-BASED TRAINING:
Improve your hitting strategy dramatically by applying human movement principles.
Learn not only how and what to train but also the science behind the methods.
One of my readers, Blake Blackwell, took his son to a Tom House pitching camp. For those who don’t know Tom House, he’s the founder of the National Pitching Association. Blake said that Tom House was teaching his pitchers to gear pitch movement for the last 1/3 of the distance to home-plate.
Why?
Studies show that Professional hitters lose sight of the ball within the last 5-7 feet of ball flight. Consider the 1/3 Vision-Rule…
Late breaking movement adds to the pitcher’s deception because a hitter like Albert Pujols isn’t picking up pitch detail during the last 1/3 of ball flight. You see, peripheral vision (out of the corner of the eye) is about picking up motion, not detail.
Understanding this is important to hitting because you’ll learn…
And upsets vision…
CLICK HERE to watch a demonstration of the One-Joint Rule I did with Shak, a Kansas University Jay-hawks wide receiver. Dr. Kelly Starrett from TheReadyState.com says this about the One-Joint Rule:
“The musculature [in the spine] is designed to create stiffness so that you can effectively transmit energy to the primary engines of your hips and shoulders. If you don’t preserve trunk stiffness while moving from your hips and shoulders, you will lose power and force. The is the basis for the one-joint rule: you should see flexion and extension movement happen at the hips and shoulders, not your spine.”
He then adds…
“Hinging at one of the segments [vertebrae in the neck]…when we put a hinge across the central nervous system, the body recognizes that as a primary insult, or threat to the body, because you’re basically guillotining or kinking the nervous system. You’ve kinked ‘the tube’, so it [force production] just drops off.”
Here they are:
How do we fix these?
First you have to understand the spine can move Globally or Locally…CLICK HERE to watch this demonstration.
Then, the hitter must understand that their head can ONLY move like it’s rotating on a “spit” (the spine), from side to side. Unless we’re talking about Global Extending or Flexing. In other words, the spine can Globally Flex towards the plate – say on a low pitch – but the head MUST stay in line with the spine as it turns towards contact.
At lastly, train this head movement with variance:
Note the difference. I guarantee Albert Pujols makes a conscious effort to keep efficient head movement during his swing. Can you see why pitchers armed with the 1/3 Vision-Rule, and hitters getting excessive head movement by breaking the One-Joint Rule can really affect repeatable power?
Hi Steve, great question. There’s a BIG difference between Global v. Local extension/flexion when trying to produce force. Global is good. Local is bad. Hinging at the vertebrae in the neck is an example of Local ext/flex. Spinal engine mechanics we talk about are an example Global ext/flex. In other words, when a hitter side bends (lateral flexion), the head should stay in alignment with the spine into the bend. A kipping pull up is a great example of Global extension/flexion of the spine. Here’s a video of KStar explaining: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SIFd-1U7wA I hope this helps clears things up Steve 🙂
Steve
Joey, great job as always. Am I correct to understand the ‘kink’ is in the neck vertebrae only and not the Thoracic section of the spine – Starrett mentions hips and shoulders – specifically saying not the spine, but that doesn’t seem to allow for the spinal engine ‘X factor’. If I’ve been clear enough – Can you elaborate?