By Joey Myers | HittingPerformanceLab.com | Former D1 Baseball, Fresno State
If you’ve been telling a hitter “keep your hands up” and the problem keeps coming back — it’s because that cue is trying to fight a load-phase movement pattern with a verbal reminder. Hands drop is specifically a stride fault: the hands sink from the back shoulder down to the waist or belly button during the stride load, and never come back up by foot strike. The cue doesn’t address what’s already set by landing.
The fix that works — backed by Reactive Neuromuscular Training research and confirmed with hitters from youth ball through professional levels — is the RNT Hands Drop Drill: feeding the mistake with resistance so the nervous system learns to correct itself. This post covers that drill, the scap load foundation that makes it stick, and the high-tee confirmation tool — plus the Finger Pressure and overload/underload progressions for when racing back elbow bat drag is layered on top. A free printable drill card PDF is at the end.
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What Does “Dropping Hands” Mean in a Baseball Swing?
Hands drop is a load-phase fault — not a swing fault. It happens during the stride: the hands physically sink from their starting position near the back shoulder/armpit level down to the waist or belly button, and never come back up by stride landing. Where the hands are at foot strike is the diagnostic checkpoint.
What it is NOT: A hitch — like Barry Bonds or Josh Hamilton — is a controlled dip and return. The hands drop down and come back up before landing. A hitch may or may not be a problem depending on the hitter, but it is a different movement. Hands drop doesn’t come back up. That is the distinction.
On film: Shoot from the side or directly in front at 240fps (standard iPhone slow-mo). Look for a 2–4 frame downward movement of the hands from load initiation to foot strike. If the hands end up at or below the belly button at landing, that’s hands drop. The target position is at or near armpit / back-shoulder height.
The Geometry Problem: Imagine a right triangle — Side a = 3 inches, Side b = 4 inches, hypotenuse c = 5 inches. A hitter whose hands drop moves down then forward: 3 + 4 = 7 inches total path. A hitter whose hands move diagonally — down AND forward simultaneously — travels only 5 inches. That’s a 2-inch longer path to every pitch. At 85+ mph pitch speed, 2 extra inches of hand path is a significant timing deficit that compounds over every at-bat.
Because of that longer path, hitters compensate: the upper half over-rotates, the barrel casts early, the front shoulder flies open. The result is diminished power, more strikeouts, and more popups on elevated pitches. Fixing the hands at the load phase cleans up compensations downstream without having to address them directly.
What Causes Dropping Hands in a Baseball or Softball Swing?
There are two primary root causes. Identifying which one — or which combination — applies to a specific hitter determines the starting drill.
Load phase vs. swing phase: The two root causes below produce hands drop during the stride load. A related but separate issue is barrel drop that happens during the swing (racing back elbow bat drag). If your hitter’s hands are staying up by landing but the barrel is still dropping through the contact zone, scroll to the Finger Pressure section below — that’s a swing-phase fault with a different fix. Also see the RNT band drill video for a dedicated demonstration.
Root Cause 1
Missing Scapula Load
The back shoulder blade doesn’t pinch inward during the stride load. Without that scapula pinch, the arm disconnects from the torso — and disconnected arms, under gravity, drift down. The scap load is the stability anchor that keeps the hands at armpit height through the stride. You can’t hold what isn’t connected.
Root Cause 2
Ingrained Neuromuscular Pattern
In many cases, hands drop is a deeply ingrained movement pattern — the body has learned to sink the hands during the stride and the nervous system executes it automatically without the hitter feeling it. This is why standard cues (“keep your hands up”) don’t fix it: you can’t consciously override a subconscious motor pattern with a verbal reminder during a 90mph pitch. This is precisely where Reactive Neuromuscular Training is uniquely effective — it feeds the mistake with resistance, forcing a reflexive correction that reprograms the pattern at the nervous system level.
Note: Some hitters also show Racing Back Elbow Bat Drag — the back elbow races past the hands during the swing, severing the connection to the turning torso. This is a swing-phase fault, often downstream of a missing scap load. If it persists after the core drills, Finger Pressure is the next intervention (see below).
3 Core Drills to Fix Dropping Hands
DRILL 1
RNT Hands Drop Drill
Primary fix: load-phase hands drop | Equipment: light resistance band (Jaeger bands preferred)
What is RNT? Reactive Neuromuscular Training — developed by Dr. Gray Cook (Functional Movement Screen) — means “feeding the mistake.” You create resistance in the direction the fault is moving and the athlete’s nervous system reflexively corrects. It’s faster and more durable than cues because it operates below the conscious level. Dr. Cook: “When your subconscious and the subtle timing of your stabilizers create joint integrity… the prime movers have no choice but to perform better.”
Setup: Step on a light resistance band with the back foot at mid-foot (so it doesn’t snap back). Hold the strap — not the handle, handles are too thick to hold with the bat. Jaeger bands are preferred because they Velcro around the wrist, leaving both hands free to grip normally. The band pulls the hands down — feeding the mistake.
Execution: This is a get-to-landing drill only — not a swing drill. Stride to foot strike and resist the band pulling the hands down. The top-hand thumb should finish at armpit level every rep. Do 5 reps with the band, then remove it and take 5 breaking-apart swings: stride to landing, pause 1–2 seconds, then swing (toss or tee). The hitter should still feel the phantom resistance from the band.
Key Coaching Note — Process Over Performance
Tell the hitter: “I don’t care where the ball goes — I’m grading you on your process.” A solid hit with dropped hands = F swing. A swing-and-miss with hands at armpit = A swing. This mindset shift is what allows the neuromuscular reprogramming to hold.
DRILL 2
Scap Load / Scapula Pinch
Foundation: builds the load stability that lets the RNT fix hold | Equipment: none (wall optional)
Setup: Take your normal hitting stance. Optional: stand 6 inches from a wall with your back to it — this prevents over-rotation and forces an honest load position. Grip the bat at the handle.
Execution: During the load, pinch the back shoulder blade inward toward the spine. Feel the back elbow drop and stay connected to the side of the body. Hold 3 seconds. Reset. 3 sets of 10 reps. Run this before the RNT drill each session — the scap gives the hands a stable anchor, then the RNT trains them to hold it under load. The scap pinch must stay engaged at the start of the turn; it releases during rotation but must be present at load initiation.
Coaching Cue
“Pinch a pencil between your shoulder blades and don’t let it fall during the load.”
DRILL 3
High-Tee Drill
Confirmation: verifies the RNT fix is carrying through to the swing | Equipment: batting tee
Setup: Set the tee at shoulder-to-chest height. Position the ball directly over the front hip. Take your normal stance — don’t adjust your feet to compensate for the height.
Execution: Swing with full intent. If the hands dropped during the load, the barrel arrives below the ball — instant miss or bottom-of-tee contact. No interpretation needed. If the hitter is making clean contact on the high tee after the RNT drill, the fix is holding into the swing. 3 sets of 8 swings, run after the RNT session.
Coaching Cue
“If the barrel dips, you miss. The tee is the referee — it doesn’t lie.”
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All 3 core drills with cues, the Finger Pressure progression, overload/underload protocol, and the 3-week plan — one printable card for the cage.
Progressive Tools: Finger Pressure and Overload/Underload Training
Once the three core drills have cleaned up load-phase hands drop, some hitters still show barrel drop through the contact zone during the swing. This indicates a secondary swing-phase fault — Racing Back Elbow Bat Drag — where the back elbow races past the hands before impact, severing the connection between the hands, bat, and turning torso. Two progressive tools address this.
Finger Pressure
Finger Pressure is a grip technique: top hand — squeeze the bottom three fingers (pinky, ring, middle) at about 8 out of 10 force. The bottom hand holds a butterfly grip — not too tight, not too loose. Timing: start the squeeze when the front foot lifts and continue through impact and follow-through.
The science: per Thomas Myers’ Anatomy Trains, the Front Arm Fascial Line runs from the pinky, ring, and middle fingers — across the bottom of the forearm, triceps, and chest — into the turning torso. Squeezing those three fingers reconnects the hands and bat to the body’s rotational engine through the fascia system. Per strength coach Pavel Tsatsouline: there is a direct correlation between grip strength and overall body strength — and gymnasts who do dynamic grip work pound-for-pound outperform most athletes in upper body strength.
Case Studies
Jace (age 10): Racing back elbow, severe. Tried everything for 4–5 months. After two weeks of Finger Pressure — two sessions total — exit velocity jumped from 46 mph to a 55 mph high. Hit his first 180-foot home run at age 11.
Zack (8th grade, 6’4″): Racing back elbow, two years of trying everything. In one 30-minute session of Finger Pressure, the back elbow pattern disappeared. EV stabilized from a scattered 77 mph high to a consistent 79–83 mph range.
Practice protocol — 5-swing variance drill: Odd swings (1, 3, 5): correct Finger Pressure — top hand, bottom three, squeezed from foot pickup through impact. Even swings (2, 4): reverse — squeeze top two (thumb + pointer), relax bottom three. Ask the hitter if they felt a difference between odd and even. Listen to impact sound — correct Finger Pressure produces louder, crisper contact.
Overload and Underload Training
Overload (bat 10–20% heavier than game bat): Amplifies the Finger Pressure feel at contact. Poor connection — any residual racing back elbow — becomes immediately obvious through soft contact sound and missed balls. 5 reps overload, then 5 reps game bat. The contrast builds body awareness faster than any cue.
Underload (bat 10–20% lighter than game bat): Trains the corrected motor pattern at higher swing speed. The phantom-band feeling from the RNT drill transfers more easily under a lighter load — especially valuable for younger hitters building the habit for the first time. 5 reps underload, then 5 reps game bat.
How to Spot Dropping Hands on Video
Film from the side or directly in front of the hitter at 240fps. Pause at foot strike / stride landing — this is the diagnostic checkpoint for hands drop, not the contact position. The hands should be at or near the back-shoulder / armpit height at this frame. If they are at or below the belly button, that’s hands drop confirmed.
Count the frames from load initiation to foot strike. A 2–4 frame downward movement with no recovery before landing confirms the fault. If you see a dip and return before landing — hands drop down and come back up — that’s a hitch, not hands drop, and needs different handling.
Secondary check: at foot strike, note where the back elbow is relative to the hands. If the elbow is already past the hands before the hips fire — that’s Racing Back Elbow Bat Drag appearing as a swing-phase fault. Fix load-phase hands drop first with the RNT drill and scap load; add Finger Pressure in Week 3 if the back elbow pattern persists through the contact zone.
How to Stop Dropping Hands in a Softball Swing
All three core drills apply directly to softball — the load-phase fault is biomechanically identical. The RNT drill setup is unchanged; Jaeger bands work at all levels. The scap load applies the same way. The high-tee adjustment is minor.
High-tee adjustment for softball: Set the tee 2–3 inches above chest height rather than shoulder height, to account for the rise ball. Softball hitters face more elevated pitches than baseball hitters — the slightly higher tee trains the barrel to stay on the rise ball plane rather than arriving below it.
For slappers: The RNT drill still applies — hands drop is a stride fault regardless of whether the hitter makes contact while running. Position the tee 6 inches forward of normal contact to replicate the slapper’s contact point while still training the load-phase hand position and stride pattern.
3-Week Progression Plan
Don’t run all tools in the same session — address root causes in order. Here’s the recommended three-week implementation:
| Week | Focus | Drills & Tools | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | Foundation & Awareness | Scap Load (3×10) → RNT Drill (5 reps, get-to-landing only) | 3–4 days/wk |
| Week 2 | Transfer to Swing | RNT (5 reps) → Breaking-apart swings (5) → High Tee (3×8) | 3–4 days/wk |
| Week 3 | Integration + Progressive | All 3 drills + live soft toss; add Finger Pressure + overload/underload bat if racing back elbow present | 3–4 days/wk |
Frequently Asked Questions
What causes dropping hands in a baseball swing?
Two primary causes: (1) a missing scapula load during the stride — the back shoulder blade doesn’t pinch inward, the arm disconnects from the torso, and gravity pulls the hands down before landing; and (2) an ingrained neuromuscular pattern — the body has learned to sink the hands during the stride and executes it automatically. Standard cues can’t override a subconscious motor pattern, which is why the RNT drill (feeding the mistake with resistance) produces faster, more durable results than verbal instruction.
How do you fix dropping hands in a baseball swing?
Use the three-drill sequence in order: Scap Load first (3×10, hold 3 seconds each rep) to build the stability anchor, then the RNT Hands Drop Drill (5 reps get-to-landing with a light resistance band, then 5 breaking-apart swings without) to reprogram the load-phase motor pattern, then the High-Tee Drill (3×8) to confirm the fix is carrying through to the swing. If racing back elbow bat drag persists into Week 3, add Finger Pressure (top hand bottom three fingers, butterfly grip bottom hand) and overload/underload bat training.
What is the RNT drill for dropping hands?
RNT stands for Reactive Neuromuscular Training — a method from Dr. Gray Cook (FMS) that means “feeding the mistake.” For hands drop, the hitter steps on a light resistance band with the back foot and holds the strap (Jaeger bands preferred — they Velcro to the wrist). The band pulls the hands down, feeding the mistake. The hitter resists, keeping the top-hand thumb at armpit level through the stride. It’s a get-to-landing drill only, not a swing drill — 5 reps with the band, then 5 breaking-apart swings without it. Grade the hitter on process, not where the ball goes. The nervous system correction that results is faster and more durable than any cue-based approach.
How do you stop dropping hands when batting in softball?
All three core drills apply directly to softball — the load-phase fault is biomechanically identical. For the High-Tee Drill, set the tee 2–3 inches above chest height (higher than the baseball setup) to account for the rise ball. For slappers, position the tee 6 inches forward of normal contact to replicate the running-through-the-ball contact point while still training the correct hand position at stride landing. The RNT band drill setup is unchanged and works at all levels.
What is Finger Pressure and how does it help with dropping hands?
Finger Pressure is a progressive tool for when racing back elbow bat drag — a swing-phase fault — persists after load-phase hands drop is corrected. The top hand squeezes the bottom three fingers (pinky, ring, middle) at 8/10 force from when the front foot lifts through impact. The bottom hand uses a butterfly grip. Per Thomas Myers’ Anatomy Trains, those three fingers connect through the Front Arm Fascial Line to the turning torso — squeezing them reconnects the bat to the body’s rotational engine. Documented results: resolved racing back elbow in two weeks (10yo hitter, EV 46→55 mph) and in one 30-minute session (8th-grader, EV 77→79-83 mph).
References:
Myers, J. Swing Smarter: Science-Based Hitting Training Built to Understand How, Why & Reasoning Behind It. 2021 — Chapter 9: How ‘Feeding the Mistake’ Stops Hands Drop; Chapter 10: Connection: Finger Pressure Magic.
Cook G, Burton L. Functional Movement Screen. Reactive Neuromuscular Training principles.
Myers T. Anatomy Trains: Myofascial Meridians for Manual and Movement Therapists. 3rd ed. Elsevier, 2014.
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All 3 core drills, the Finger Pressure progression, overload/underload protocol, and the 3-week plan — one printable card for the cage.