When you have your heel up you can get down to bunt the low pitch without losing connection between your line of sight & the bat.
THREE KEYS
1. Connection between line of sight & the bat throughout the bunt.
2. Both elbows pointing DOWN.
3. Back heel up.
Vanderbilt's Scott Brown @browntown_vandy using a bucket to FEEL how to #RidetheSlide with The #CoreVelocityBelt
The key is controlling the movement.
Small, smooth, controlled movements are the key.
This may sound simple, but many pitchers stray away from their strengths too frequently.
They try to get too cute or try to keep hitters guessing and end up getting beat by their 3rd/4th best pitches too often.
“He hasn’t seen it yet” is not a great reason to throw a pitch.
So, rather than trying to work corners, simpler approach = nearly every fastball down the middle in the upper half of the zone (where it plays best and giving room to miss right and left).
This ultimately gives a high probability of both strikes and swings and misses.
Walk it off🎟️👊
Niagara County sent a ball down the first-base line to score the winning run in the bottom of the 9th, and send them to the #NJCAABaseball DIII World Series.
https://t.co/oaBxOTOf9q