This post discusses youth hitting fundamentals of why squishing the bug is bad for baseball and softball players in 2022? Learn basic how to hit the ball in a certain direction beginner swing tips experiment. This information is great for 10-year old’s and younger.
Using the Zepp (Labs) Baseball app
This can be a very sore subject, and hotly debated with a passion, in the Church of Baseball. Surprisingly, it’s still widely taught throughout the lower levels. Although a few images off the internet of effective swingers like Cano, Bautista, McCutchen, etc. will reveal “squishing the bug” isn’t what the best are doing.
So we wanted to test it…
My intern for the summer, redshirt college freshman Tyler Doerner did this experiment. This post is for you Joe (you know who you are ;-)…
One of the main objectives of whether to skip the foot, or keep it on the ground, has to do with transferring linear momentum, better known as un-weighting or forward momentum. Check out these four HPL posts for a baseball swing mechanics background on this:
Now, for you academics, CLICK HERE to watch a short 2-minute PBS video on Circus Physics and the Conservation of Linear Momentum.
So, after reading/watching the above videos and posts, we should be at a common understanding of Forward Momentum.
The next objective of “squishing the bug” versus “skipping the back foot” during the turn, boils down to allowing the body to transfer energy effectively. This has to do with springy fascia in the body…
In Thomas Myers’s book Anatomy Trains
Specifically in the book, he talks about the Front & Back Functional Lines. CLICK HERE for a post I did on this, featuring Ted Williams and Matt Kemp.
In the following video, Thomas Myers explains this idea of Tensegrity, or Tension-Integrity. There are compression and tension forces acting on the body at all times. Within the body these two opposing forces are always searching for balance…
For a hitter, if the body moves forward, but the back foot and leg stays behind, then these forces don’t get optimally transferred from body to barrel to ball. In other words, the backside gets “left behind”.
Based on the above research, I think “squishing the bug” baseball swing mechanics will have a depressing effect on bat and hand speed because it doesn’t allow for full transfer of momentum and release of elastic energy in the springy fascia.
Equipment Used:
Setup:
The Bottom Line?
In this “Squish the Bug” baseball swing mechanics experiment, “Skipping the Back Foot” showed a notable difference in average Bat & Hand Speed, Time To Impact, and the hitters Attack Angle. I want to encourage you to tinker and test this for yourself. The objective of these swing experiments is to put modern hitting theory to the test, literally. We NEED to test based on data, not feelings. Share these results with friends.
That’s my point – the way “squishing the bug” was originally taught was “one of the first things a hitter does!” It was taught as occurring pre-final turn, pushing the hips open, not a torquing action. I remember the guy saying it in the video. Do you know how many people bought into that? A lot!
Please enlighten me here boys. This ‘Squishing the bug’ thing is confusing to me. I take it that means rotating/turning over your back foot in a motion that resembles squishing a bug (you could also call it ‘Putting out a cigarette!’). Anyway … I can’t see any way around doing that. The turning/rolling over of the back foot is essential or you’ll end up with a serious situation of reciprocal inhibition in a few areas.
Joe
Great job, Joey! I guess it’s me you refer to. Thanks, makes me feel important and gives me street creds as a critic. But I do believe that Mike Scioscia would know that intuitively. Certainly Ted Williams would. 😉
Just kidding. I do believe in your methods but I believe there is something to be said for trusting your intuition. There are “spirits in the material world” as The Police once sang.
Keep up the could work. I could have used your research in combating the “squish the bug” heresy about 15 – 20 years ago. Your website, products, articles, and experiments have made a significant contribution to the science of hitting. But don’t forget the art aspect of it.