Archive for February, 2009

The Outfielder’s Crow-Hop: Book Excerpt

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

One of the least understood and incorrectly executed movements is the Crow-Hop. This movement used by outfielders correctly will improve throwing accuracy and strength. So what is a Crow-Hop? Basically, it is a movement the player executes to provide balance and throwing momentum after the catch. The catch can be on ground balls or fly balls – but the player must properly use the Crow-Hop to give him the best chance of making good throws. Balance is the goal and the key to good outfield play.

Below is an excerpt from my new book, How To Play Baseball Outfield and can be reviewed and purchased at my Bookstore. Happy reading!

The Crow-Hop
This next sequence is done in one fluid motion. After catching the ground ball, the outfielder should push off the front knee and replace the front foot with the back foot.

The best way to do this is to elevate off the ground, lift the back knee first, then the front knee, and put the back foot down approximately where the front foot was. When done correctly, the back-knee/front-knee lifts and back-foot/front-foot exchange happens quickly.

While elevating and replacing, the player should also turn his torso and hips so that his glove shoulder is pointing toward the target. This motion is called the “Crow-Hop”.

The Crow-Hop is a movement that gets the player best positioned to throw the ball. The outfielder is creating balance, aligning shoulders to the target, and loading up his throwing (back) leg for the throw.

Loading the back (throwing-side) leg is a term used to describe the beginning of the throwing motion. Simply put, it means most of the player’s weight is on his back leg. “Most” means more than 50 percent and less than 100 percent. Some instructors like to pinpoint the exact percentage, but my experience with thousands of ballplayers tells me it is a little different for each player. The average weight distribution is about 80-20 back leg to front leg.

Like most sports including baseball, a player must move in one direction to move better to the opposite direction. Both hitters and pitchers do this as well. It’s a mechanism for balance and bodily energy.

Some players exaggerate the crow-hop by lifting their knees very high, almost like a marching band. Other players drag their back leg in to a bad, or “short”, position – and the back leg never gets completely under the body. Neither of these methods is correct.

The proper technique is to lift the knee high enough so the player’s back leg supports the body. This creates balance – and good throws. See Figures 2-4 (a), (b), and (c) for this sequence of movements.
When outfielders get really good at the Crow-Hop technique it looks seamless and smooth.
Here’s a summary of the One Knee Block Technique:
• Drop the throwing knee to the ground, slightly behind the other knee.
• Extend the glove hand, elbow slightly bent, to “look the ball in to the glove”.
• Expose the glove pocket to the ball by bending the wrist back.
• Open the throwing hand and position it two to six inches above the glove.
• After catching the ball cleanly, push off the front knee (the one not on the ground).
• When rising, crow-hop by replacing the front foot with the back foot (replace the glove- side foot with the throwing-side foot).
• The final result is the player’s back leg (throwing-side) is loaded, his shoulders are aligned to the target, and the throwing sequence begins.
• The One Knee Block can be used by any level player, but youth players benefit most by it.”

Caution: Sliding, Cha-Cha, and Gliding
Many players, me included in my youth, try to execute the crow-hop without clearly replacing one foot with the other. They just slide the back foot, leaving it short of replacing the front (glove-side) foot.

First hand experience shows that this results in bad balance and poor throws. Once I learned to lift my knees and position my throwing leg underneath my body, my balance and throws were consistently good. Figure 2-6 illustrates the incorrect Sliding Crow-Hop. You can see that the outfielder has not loaded his back leg, is overstretched and off-balance. This throw is highly likely to be a poor one.

A common situation of the Sliding Crow-Hop happens after his back leg has slid short of full balance. The player’s brain tells him he is off-balance and he tries to correct it by quickly re-positioning his back (throwing-side) leg. His front leg is still in the air while his back leg is pumping up and down.
This makes him look like he is on a pogo stick. He pumps his back leg two or three times to try to get balanced – and all the while his momentum is carrying him forward so that he rarely gets fully balanced.

Another incorrect variation of the crow-hop is what I call the Babe Ruth Cha-Cha. The Babe would move up in the batter’s box to swing at a curve ball before it curved. He did this by moving his back foot behind his front, then striding to hit the ball. A lot of today’s slowpitch softball players do this too. Figure 2-7 shows the Ruth Cha-Cha move.

Again, you see that the player is off-balance. He is also moving parallel to the target, taking his momentum off-target. Arm strain and bad throws surely will result.

Many players use the Cha-Cha move to turn their upper bodies to throw. While the move does align the player’s shoulders to the target, it also reduces balance and momentum.

The Gliding Crow-Hop looks like a mid-air scissor kick, as if a ballet dancer were fielding the ball. The player’s knees do not lift; instead he leaps up, brings both straight legs together, then strides out with his front (glove-side) leg while his throwing leg hits the ground.

To most untrained observers, this looks pretty good. But gliding has very high odds of getting the player off-balance. Most times, the player’s momentum is moving so fast that he does not allow himself to properly load his back leg for the throw.

The Gliding Crow-Hop also never allows the outfielder’s back leg to get fully loaded. He is so off-balance that many times he falls forward to the ground after the throw. Figures 2-8 (a) and (b) show this incorrect sequence of movements.”

I hope this post helps players and coaches know the correct and often-used incorrect ways to use the Crow-Hop in the outfield. You will be amazed at the improvement in your fielding and throwing by properly executing this critical movement.

For the full explanation of all outfield techniques, visit Steven E. Michael Publishing and click on “Bookstore”. Thanks for reading my blog.

The Stigma and Stench of Steroids

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

So the U.S. judicial system found 104 names in a spreadsheet at a testing company in Long Beach, California. This was November 2003. Obviously one major leaguer’s name on that list stood out from the rest – Alex Rogriguez. The test results and the list were to have been destroyed. But for six days, the Major League Players Association (MLPA) and Major League Baseball (MLB) could not agree on when the records destruction should take place. Enter the government who legally entered and searched Comprehensive Testing, Inc.’s premises for ten names who were allegedly associated with their BALCO investigation. Instead they find the almost anonymous list of 104.

I say almost anonymous because Rogriguez’s name is now front and center in sports news across the world. Two questions immediately come to mind. If this list was supposed to be confidential, who leaked the one name from the list with the most incendiary consequences? And secondly, what should be done about the other names on the list?

The confidentiality of testing for player’s use of performance enhancing drugs (PEDs) is an agreement between MLB and the union. There is no aspect of U.S. law that protects that confidentiality directly. Given these facts, who is in the most beneficial position to have the names exposed? The federal prosecutor that’s who. So without a shred of evidence on my part, I hereby name the prosecutor’s office the leaker. There are laws on the books when it comes to government employees leaking confidential information. And whoever leaked the information, in all cases, should be tried. Who else benefits from this illegal act? You guessed it, the media, specifically Sports Illustrated.

Will we ever know who leaked the information? Will that person or persons ever be prosecuted? No. All we have to do is look at the BALCO investigation and prosecution. Barry Bonds et al are either in the process of being permanently harmed, or have already been permanently harmed. But these users of PEDs are not completely innocent either. I believe they get what they deserve. If they must give up gold medals, or lose lucrative sponsorships, or be left out of the Hall of Fame, so be it. They are cheaters and have stained the very sports that have given them so much.

What about the media? Their skirts are clean, right? Wrong. Taking ill-gotten information from illegal government sources and “reporting” that information to the public is all they say they do. Reporters look past the fact the reason they received the information is through illegal means. They write multiple columns that try to explain they are just doing their job.

So what’s the result? The leaker (prosecutor) gets to expand the investigation by leaking one name. They hope to find the sources of these (now) illegal substances and if they must ruin athlete’s lives to do it – they view it as collateral damage. The SI reporter and the magazine get what they want – readership. More readers mean more exposure for the magazine, which means more advertising dollars and more profit. The writer may even net industry awards for “just doing their job”.

But two wrongs do not make a right. The government and Sports Illustrated were doing things in their best interest. The government leak is illegal. The SI stance, they say, is protected by law, specifically freedom of the press. But what about right and wrong? Standing beside the first amendment claiming that sources are confidential is not a protected right of the press and they should be brought to divulging their source – period.

This is all very muddling. Where does it end? Who is responsible? I lay the blame for what has happened and what should happen going forward on two parties. Major League Baseball and the player’s association. The reason the 104 names were to be confidential was because these two entities wanted to only assess the extent of PED use in baseball in 2003. They believed that by moving slowly on policing PED use would serve the best interests of all concerned. What is the best interest of all concerend? – MONEY. Use of PEDs throughout the 1990′s was accelerating at a rapid pace. Home run records were falling and attendence was breaking records every season. Television revenue was being attracted in quantities never even dreamed of in years past. If MLB and MLPA brass did not know about PED use by players, they had their collective heads in the sand.

But they did know, and wanted it to go away by itself. Instead of stopping it immediately through rigorous testing and penalties, they whitewashed it for the money. The difference between knowing of the abuse and not knowing is the difference between a conspiracy and ineptitude. I vote for the insidious choice.

So what should happen now? If MLB and the union want to get baseball out of the mess they have allowed to happen, they should publish all test results and punish the transgressors. Defuse the entire situation and do the right thing. Take the sting out of being complicit in PED use, protect the players who have not cheated, and use the high road to bring baseball out of this well-muscled abyss.

But as we all suspect and fear, they will not do that. Bud Selig and Donald Fehr will not take the public relations hit they richly deserve. They will cite legal reasons and privacy rights without telling us the real reason – they are bowing to the dollar.

Fielding Ground Balls: Book Excerpt

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

I have seen and heard too many different coaching methods for fielding ground balls in the outfield. And most of the methods I hear are wrong. Some coaches teach players to field the ball off to one side of the body, and others say get a bigger glove and just snatch everything with one hand. But, hands down, the worst mistake coaches make in teaching young players is neglecting the lower body and its proper movements.

In this post, I give you another excerpt from my new book, How To Play Baseball Outfield: Techniques, Tips, and Drills to Learn the Outfield Postion. Today, we will explore the correct way the player should position his feet, knees, arms, hands, and head. Too much you say? Without all these body parts in the correct position, the player’s chances of consistently fielding ground balls is slim and none – and slim left town. Read on and enjoy.

Fielding: Non-Urgent Throw
While every throw an outfielder makes should be accurate and strong, not all throws are urgent. Urgent means the throw is used to put out a base runner.

Those throws where the outfielder has more time to field the ball are called Non-Urgent. These are throws back to an infielder or a base and are used to prevent base runners from advancing. The typical example is where a batter gets a base hit and the outfielder returns the ball to second base. This prevents the base runner from advancing beyond first base.

One Knee Block Technique
This is just like it sounds. The outfielder positions himself in front of the oncoming ground ball, drops one knee to the ground, and fields the ball. Sounds simple right? Not so fast, there’s more to it than that!

The outfielder should be ready to field the ball as it gets closer. He should be in an athletic stance:
• feet outside shoulder-width
• knees bent (not too far)
• head up
• torso bent slightly forward

Figure 2-1 shows the outfielder prior to the One Knee Block Technique. Notice that his hands are not on his knees, his head is up and alert, knees are bent, and his torso is slightly bent forward. This position gives the outfielder the best chance at not only fielding the ball cleanly, but also getting good jumps on the ball. More on “Jumps” later in the book.

As the ball approaches and the outfielder is sure he is positioned directly in front of it, he drops one knee to the ground. This reduces the size of the hole between his legs. It also brings his chest lower to help block the ball in case of a bad hop.

The fielder’s glove hand should be extended out in front of his body, but his elbow should not be fully extended. The fielder should bend his wrist back just far enough to expose the glove’s entire pocket to the ball. Too many outfielders keep their wrist straight, which points the glove pocket skyward. Bad wrist position reduces the size of the pocket and contributes to the ball glancing off the heel of the glove.

The other problem is not getting the glove out away from the body far enough. While keeping the glove closer to the body allows the pocket to be easily exposed, it also prevents the player from seeing the glove. A player can’t “look the ball in to the glove” if he can’t see his glove. Figures 2-2 (a) and (b) show the incorrect and correct ways to position the glove.

His throwing hand should be two to six inches above his glove, facing out and open. His throwing hand will help knock the ball down and also help prevent a bad hop from striking him in the face.”

There is much more information in my book on all aspects of playing outfield. If you are interested, visit the Bookstore at www.stevenemichael.com. You can also read about my experience and qualifications for the book. Thanks for reading!