No Stride Baseball Swing: The Zepp Experiment + 3 CLS Load Movements That Fix Timing and Power

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By Joey Myers | HittingPerformanceLab.com | Former D1 Baseball, Fresno State

“Stop striding and just hit it.” Every coach in youth baseball has said it at least once. The no-stride baseball swing gets prescribed when a hitter is late, lunging, or spinning off the ball — and sometimes it helps. But does it actually add power? And is it fixing the real problem?

I ran a counter-balanced Zepp experiment to answer that. I had hitters use their normal stride and their widest no-stride preset stance on the same pitches in randomized order and measured every metric Zepp tracks. The result? Bat speed difference between a longer stride and a no-stride wide stance was statistically insignificant. Stride length is not a power variable.

What IS a power variable — and what controls both timing AND consistency — is the CLS load sequence: three specific upper-body movements that load the springy fascia system before the swing begins. These three movements work with any stride style. Fix the load and the timing problems that sent you looking for a no-stride fix often disappear on their own.

This post covers what the no-stride baseball swing is, when it genuinely helps, when it doesn’t, and the three CLS movements that fix what no-stride can’t reach.

3
Core Movements
3
Stride Styles
2
Root Causes Fixed
+6
mph Bat Speed

What Is the No Stride Baseball Swing?

“No stride” covers three different approaches that coaches mean when they use the phrase. They’re not the same mechanics, and they’re not appropriate for the same hitters.

1. Preset / Wide Stance

Feet are set wide in the stance — so wide there’s no room for a stride at all. The hitter loads in place and turns. True zero-stride. Common in tee work, wheel machine reps, and early development.

2. Slide Step

A small lateral shift with no lift — the foot slides forward rather than lifting and striding. The most common “no-stride” used in MLB. Most hitters with 2 strikes or facing elite velocity shorten to a slide step naturally. Technically there IS a stride, just a minimal one.

3. Toe Tap

A brief tap of the front toe before striding — a transitional rhythm cue for hitters moving away from a leg kick. The stride still happens, but the timing rhythm is different. Often a bridge technique while CLS load mechanics are being built.

Most hitters labeled “no-stride” in MLB are actually using a slide step. True preset (zero stride) is rare outside of utility players and specific training contexts. What matters more than which style you choose is whether the CLS load sequence is executing inside whichever stride style you’re using — more on that shortly.

When the No Stride Baseball Swing Actually Helps

No-stride is a legitimate timing tool in specific situations. Here’s where it earns its place.

⏱ Chronically Late on Faster Pitching

When a hitter is consistently behind on 85+ mph and a shorter load hasn’t solved it, removing the stride eliminates the timing variable. A slide step or preset gives the hitter less moving parts to coordinate. This is a legitimate band-aid while the CLS load is being trained — but the load is what eventually fixes the problem permanently.

⚾ 2-Strike Approach

With 2 strikes, a shorter stride (slide step) gives more stable lower-half grounding for durability and contact against off-speed. Many MLB hitters naturally shorten their stride on 2-strike counts. It’s a deliberate approach adjustment — not a swing rebuild.

🎯 Wheel Machine and Rapid-Fire BP

Wheel machines and rapid-fire batting practice present the ball on a fixed loop — there’s no pitcher rhythm to time a full stride against. A preset or slide step is the right tool here. Just don’t let machine timing become the hitter’s default game swing over time.

🚫 True Lunging

Important distinction: lunging is moving forward after stride touchdown — post-landing forward drift. Before touchdown, head movement is present in most elite MLB hitters (Ted Williams, Pedroia, Cano all drift forward slightly before landing). If a hitter is drifting AFTER the foot plants, shortening the stride or going preset can help contain it while the load fix is trained.

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What the No Stride Baseball Swing Won’t Fix — and Why

Stride is timing and rhythm. It’s not a power generator. Removing it or shortening it can simplify coordination — but it doesn’t fix load mechanics, doesn’t add elastic energy to the system, and doesn’t address why a hitter is losing power or struggling for consistency. Those problems trace to two root causes upstream of the stride.

Root Cause 1: Missing CLS Load Mechanics

The CLS load sequence activates the springy fascia system — the elastic connective tissue that stores energy during the load and releases it as the hips turn through contact. When the load is missing or incomplete, the hitter is swinging with muscles alone: slower, weaker, and inconsistent under fatigue or competitive pressure.

A no-stride preset doesn’t add the load. It just removes the stride. If the CLS movements aren’t happening in the stance, the same missing mechanics play out — now with even less timing rhythm to compensate.

The Zepp data: The CLS load sequence (specifically Neck Pressure / Showing Numbers) added +6 mph average bat speed at impact and +2 mph hand speed max across 200 controlled swings. Stride length added nothing statistically significant to any metric.

Root Cause 2: No Timing Trigger (The Missing Bounce)

The second root cause is the absence of a consistent load timing trigger. When the CLS load should happen varies by hitter — but the most common pattern is that it triggers AS the front foot lifts to begin the stride. This “Bounce” or “Float and Fall” coordinates the upper-body load with the lower-body stride rhythm.

Without this trigger, the load is random — some reps get it right, most don’t. Timing problems that look like stride problems are often really the Bounce being inconsistent or absent. Shortening the stride doesn’t install the Bounce; it just shortens the window in which the missing Bounce plays out.

The 3 CLS Movements That Fix Timing and Power With Any Stride Style

These three movements — taken from the Catapult Loading System — work together to load the springy fascia chain before the swing begins. They work with a leg kick, a slide step, a preset stance, or anything in between. The stride style is the delivery vehicle; the CLS load is the payload.

CLS Movement 1

Neck Pressure / Showing Numbers

The front shoulder tucks DOWN and IN toward the front of the back hip before stride landing. The physical feel is pressure building at the back of the neck — which is why it’s called “neck pressure.” The visual coaching cue: show the numbers on the back of your jersey to the pitcher.

Zepp-validated result: +6 mph avg Bat Speed at Impact · +2 mph Hand Speed Max · +3° positive Attack Angle

This movement creates the springy X pattern in the fascial system (Thomas Myers, Anatomy Trains): the front-shoulder-to-back-hip line on the chest shortens, storing elastic energy that catapults the barrel at contact. The key: hold it all the way to stride landing. Don’t release early.

Coaching Cue

“Show your numbers to the pitcher and hold it until your foot lands. If you feel pressure at the back of your neck, you’re in the right position.”

What to watch for:

  • Pelvis stays neutral (parallel to plate) at landing — don’t let the belt buckle point toward the catcher, which kills the X pattern
  • Numbers held to stride landing — the common fault is releasing the front shoulder early, which bleeds the elastic energy before contact
  • Back eye stays on the pitcher — crane the neck forward as the front shoulder turns in; don’t restrict the head
  • Feel the neck pressure — if there’s no pressure, the shoulder didn’t turn far enough; the feel is the diagnostic

CLS Movement 2

Scapula Pinch / Hiding Hands

As the front shoulder rolls IN (Movement 1), the back shoulder rows BACK — the rear scapula retracts toward the spine. This is the “Roll and Row.” The hands disappear behind the body from the pitcher’s view: they’re “hiding.”

Zepp result: +1 mph avg Bat Speed · +1 mph Hand Speed Max · −.005 sec Time to Impact (stacked on Movement 1)

This is the Yin and Yang of the CLS load. Effective rotation requires the front scapula to protract (roll in) while the back scapula retracts (rows back) simultaneously. A scap row without the front shoulder rolling in is half the equation. A front shoulder turn without the scap row is the other half missing. Both together complete the springy X on both sides of the body.

Coaching Cue

“Roll the front shoulder in, row the back shoulder back — one fluid move. Hide the hands from the pitcher. If I can see your hands from the mound, you’re not there yet.”

What to watch for:

  • Roll AND Row together — back scapula rowing without the front shoulder rolling in produces almost nothing for power
  • Hands not visible from a front/pitcher’s view at stride landing — if you can see them, the scapula hasn’t retracted enough
  • Back elbow drops naturally and connects to the body when scapula retracts correctly — if the elbow is flying, the row is missing
  • Some slack in the front arm — a fully barred-out front arm at landing limits the springy effect on that side of the X

CLS Movement 3

The Bounce — Float and Fall

The Bounce is WHEN to time the CLS load — the rhythm trigger that makes Movements 1 and 2 automatic. For most MLB hitters, the trigger is the front foot lifting to begin the stride: as the foot comes up, the hitter “bounces” or “floats” into the CLS loaded position simultaneously, arriving there by the time the foot lands.

Two valid options: start in the CLS position (Hunter Pence, Ben Zobrist, Stan Musial — the Preset approach) or move into it as the stride begins (Ted Williams, Dustin Pedroia, Robinson Cano, Sadaharu Oh — the Float and Fall approach). Both produce the same springy fascia effect. It’s a feel preference. What’s not optional is being in the CLS loaded position by stride landing.

Coaching Cue

“As your front foot lifts, let the body bounce into the loaded position — neck pressure on, hands hiding, shoulders downhill. Land in the Fight Position, then turn.”

The Break-It-Apart Drill: Building the CLS Load Before Making It Fluid

Before the full CLS load sequence becomes automatic in a fluid swing, it has to be consciously felt in a broken-apart drill. This is the primary practice method for training all three movements.

1

Get to the Fight Position (Stride Landing)

Use your stride style of choice. By the time the front foot lands, you should be: showing numbers (neck pressure felt), back shoulder hidden/rowed, front shoulder rolled in, pelvis neutral. Pause here 1–2 seconds. Give the brain time to process the position consciously before firing the turn.

2

Then Swing — Release the Load

Fire the turn from the loaded position. Hips lead, shoulders follow. The pause means you are consciously executing from the correct Fight Position before the turn — not guessing and firing. Grade A swings: Fight Position achieved before turning. Grade F swings: numbers released early, even on a line drive.

3

Mix In Full Fluid Swings

5-swing rounds: odd swings = Break-It-Apart (pause at landing). Even swings = full fluid swing, CLS load attempting to replicate the Fight Position without the pause. Ask the hitter: “Did you feel the load on that one?” If yes, that’s the rep. If no, back to the break-it-apart version until the position is consistent.

Process grading note: The Break-It-Apart drill is graded on process, not contact. A hitter who achieves the Fight Position correctly on a swinging strike is running an A drill. A hitter who gets a hit from an early-release load is running an F drill. Train the position; let contact take care of itself.

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Take the 3 CLS Movements With You to Practice

The free No-Stride Swing Guide drill card has all 3 movements, coaching cues, what-to-watch-for checklists, and the 3-week progression in a single printable PDF.

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Applying the CLS Load to Each Stride Style

The three CLS movements are stride-style agnostic. Here’s how they apply to each approach.

Preset / Wide Stance + CLS

Start in the stance already in the CLS loaded position — showing numbers, back shoulder hidden, downhill shoulders. The Bounce is a subtle weight shift into the back hip as a timing trigger, not a full stride. Hold the loaded position. Turn when ready.

Common fault: Starting in a neutral stance with no load, then just turning. Missing the CLS load means this is just an arm swing with no fascia power.

Slide Step + CLS

The load triggers as the foot begins its lateral shift. The shorter timing window means the Bounce must fire early and quickly. Hitters who slide step and can’t get the full CLS load completed by landing often need to start in a partially pre-loaded position (hands slightly hidden in the stance) to give the load enough time to complete.

MLB examples: Many MLB hitters naturally use a slide step on 2-strike counts while keeping the CLS load intact — it’s purely a timing adjustment, not a swing change.

Toe Tap + CLS

The toe tap gives a rhythm cue before the stride. The CLS Bounce triggers as the foot comes back up off the tap to stride forward. This is a natural transitional technique for hitters who are moving away from a leg kick and need rhythm without the full hip lift. The tap gives the Bounce a clear starting point.

Best for: Hitters in transition — not a long-term stride style for most hitters, but a useful bridge while CLS load mechanics are being built and the stride timing is recalibrated.

Stride Style CLS Bounce Trigger Load Timing Window Best Use Case
Preset / Wide Weight shift into back hip Start in loaded position Severe timing issues, tee/machine work, early development
Slide Step As foot begins lateral shift Short window — may need pre-load Faster pitching, 2-strike, most MLB-level hitters
Toe Tap As foot lifts off tap Medium — clear rhythm trigger Transition away from leg kick; hitters needing rhythm
Full Stride / Leg Kick As front knee lifts Longest window — most time for CLS load Works well when CLS load is already trained; not recommended without it

3-Week CLS Load Progression

Build each movement to mastery before adding the next. Rushing all three simultaneously produces shallow learning on all of them. The 5-swing round structure applies throughout: odd swings = with the movement, even swings = without.

Week Focus Drill Protocol Grade On
Week 1 Neck Pressure / Showing Numbers only Break-It-Apart drill: get to landing showing numbers, pause 1–2 sec, turn. 5-swing rounds, 3–4 sessions. Odd = showing numbers / even = not. Tee or soft toss. Numbers held to landing; feel pressure at back of neck on every A-grade rep.
Week 2 Add Roll & Row / Hiding Hands Break-It-Apart: landing = showing numbers AND hiding hands together. Add full fluid swings on even reps. 5-swing rounds. Tee or front toss. Both movements present at landing; hands not visible from pitcher’s view on every A-grade rep.
Week 3 Add The Bounce + Full Integration Full fluid CLS swing — load triggers on front foot lift (or preset). Mix Break-It-Apart (odd) and full fluid (even). Add live front toss or machine at low velocity. CLS position automatic at landing without conscious pause. Zepp/Blast: expect +4–6 mph vs. pre-Week 1 baseline.

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Take the 3-Week Plan to Practice

Get the No-Stride Swing Guide + CLS Load Sequence drill card — the 3 CLS movements, Break-It-Apart drill, coaching cues, and the full 3-week progression in a printable PDF.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does a no-stride baseball swing add bat speed or power?

No. A controlled Zepp experiment comparing a longer stride against a wide no-stride preset stance showed a statistically insignificant difference in bat speed, hand speed, and all other measurable metrics. Stride length is not a power variable. The CLS load sequence — specifically neck pressure / showing numbers — added an average of +6 mph bat speed at impact across 200 swings. The load is the lever; the stride is just timing.

Why do coaches prescribe the no-stride swing for hitters who are late?

Shortening or removing the stride eliminates a coordination variable, which can reduce the number of things that go wrong against faster pitching. It’s a legitimate timing tool and an appropriate band-aid. But being late is usually a load mechanics problem — the CLS Bounce (the timing trigger for the upper-body load) is inconsistent or missing. Shortening the stride doesn’t fix the Bounce; it just shortens the window in which the problem plays out. The permanent fix is training the CLS load sequence.

Can youth hitters use the no-stride approach while learning the CLS load?

Yes — this is one of the best uses of a preset or wide-stance approach. For younger hitters learning the CLS load sequence for the first time, starting in the preset CLS position (already showing numbers and hiding hands in the stance) removes the coordination demand of completing the load during a stride. Once the load is felt and trained in the preset, the Bounce (Float and Fall) can be introduced to build a fluid stride back in. Many coaches successfully use this sequence: preset first → slide step → full stride.

What’s the difference between “lunging” and a forward head shift during the stride?

This is a critical distinction. Lunging — in the mechanical sense that hurts hitters — is moving forward after stride touchdown. The body continues to drift toward the pitcher after the front foot plants. Before touchdown, forward head movement is present in the majority of elite MLB hitters and is not a problem. Ted Williams, Dustin Pedroia, and Robinson Cano all show pre-landing head drift. If you’re prescribing a no-stride for “lunging,” first confirm whether the drift is before or after landing. If it’s before, lunging may not be the actual problem.

How long does it take to see bat speed improvement from the CLS load sequence?

In the Zepp experiment, bat speed differences were measurable within a single session of contrast training (5-swing rounds, alternating with and without the movement). That said, making a movement automatic in a game swing typically takes 3–6 weeks of deliberate practice. The 3-week progression in this post — one movement per week, Break-It-Apart drill first, fluid integration second — produces measurable improvements on Zepp or Blast Motion within the Week 3 integration phase. Baseline before Week 1; retest after Week 3.

About the Author

Joey Myers — HittingPerformanceLab.com

D1 baseball at Fresno State. Creator of the Catapult Loading System (CLS), built on springy fascia science, the Spinal Engine, and the Anatomy Trains framework. Has worked with hitters across youth baseball and softball through professional players. The Zepp experiments referenced in this post were conducted with counter-balanced designs over 200+ controlled swings.

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