Ever feel like you’re stuck on a loop? You pay $60 a week for hitting lessons. Your kid works hard in the cage. The coach gives a thumbs up. But come game day? Strike three. Again.
You’re not alone—and it’s not your fault.
In this game-changing episode of the Swing Smarter Hitting Training Podcast, Joey Myers from HittingPerformanceLab.com lays out the hard truths about why traditional hitting lessons often don’t translate to real results—and what you can do to finally break the cycle and develop a confident, game-ready hitter who performs under pressure.
Let’s face it: Baseball and softball parents across Reddit and Facebook are asking the same question…
“Are hitting lessons really worth it?”
And based on the groundhog day results many of us are seeing? That answer is fuzzy—until now.
Joey breaks it down with no fluff and all facts. The problem isn’t always the lesson itself. The real issue is what happens between them. Without a system in place for follow-through and feedback, lessons turn into expensive band-aids instead of real solutions.
1. The Real Work Happens Between Lessons
“The lesson is the prescription. The real progress happens when your kid takes the medicine—consistently.”
A single lesson a week is like going to the gym once and expecting abs. Unless your child is working on their drills between sessions, improvement will plateau. Look for a coach (or system) that gives 1–2 clear focus drills your kid can do at home.
2. Not All Coaches Are Created Equal
“There’s a difference between a coach and a glorified rep counter.”
Is your hitting coach giving vague encouragement like “swing harder”? Or are they spotting patterns, explaining why a drill matters, and engaging your child in their development? A great coach creates thinkers at the plate, not just repeaters in the cage.
3. If It Doesn’t Show Up on Game Day, It Doesn’t Count
“Your kid might be a cage All-Star… but are they a game-time performer?”
Drawing from Dr. Bhrett McCabe’s contextual interference principle, Joey explains that hitting practice must include variable pitch speeds, unpredictable timing, and real-world chaos. Otherwise, your hitter will freeze when it counts.
One of the biggest takeaways? It’s not about doing more—it’s about doing what matters.
A daily 5-minute mirror drill or a focused round of dry swings can do more than an hour of mindless cage work. Joey even breaks down a simple weekly ROI checklist to help you evaluate if your current coach—or system—is actually delivering results.
Don’t have $60/week to spare on lessons that might not work?
That’s exactly why Joey built The Feedback Lab—a fully online hitting lesson system that delivers:
Personalized swing breakdowns
Weekly custom drills
Clear, consistent feedback
No more guesswork. No wasted reps.
Perfect for busy families who want game-day results without the stress of travel, scheduling, or spending thousands.
If you’ve ever driven away from a lesson thinking, “We’re doing everything right… why isn’t it working?”—this episode is for you.
Let’s stop burning cash—and start building confident, clutch hitters who show up when it matters.