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This episode is brought to you by baseballcloud and OnBaseU.
Guest: Dr. Peter Fadde, Chief Officer and Co-Founder of gameSense, and Associate Professor of Learning Systems Design & Technology at Southern Illinois University
Dr. Fadde explains the benefits of occlusion training
Dillan Lawson’s presentation at Slugfest used a soccer player kicking a goal with the lights turned off 2/3 of the way to teach occlusion training
What is “pitch recognition” and how is it different from “plate discipline?”
Dr. Fadde’s occlusion training offers the batter’s view point facing the pitcher with a maximum possible score of 250
Video cued tee work is tee work that includes the timing off of the pitcher
Hitting baseballs is not like hitting golf balls or baseballs off of a tee
Vision training focuses on visual skills like dynamic tracking, acuity, peripheral vision, and focus
Pitch recognition should help hitters get the feel of the pitcher’s wind-up
If you aren’t looking at a pitcher, then it isn’t really pitch recognition
Live drills for hitters to call out “yes” or “no” on a particular pitch type before the ball hits the catcher’s mitt strengthens pitch recognition
The best form of pitch recognition is standing in the bullpen
Mike Schmidt wrote a fantastic books on hitting
Attention occlusion drills should keep the batter focusing on the pitcher, not the catcher
gameSense certified their first hitting coach Coach Killian at Elite Velocity in St. Louis, Missouri
Softball is getting a boast again from entering into the Olympics
Pitch recognition is the perceptual skill of making an actionable meaning out of the pitch you see.
Your eyes can’t track pitch speeds over 83 miles an hour all the way into the bat.
Visualize the pitcher. Visualize the pitch. Visualize hitting that pitch.
“If you can test it, you can train it.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (4:53)
“Human beings, and other animals, can learn incredible things with repetition, immediate feedback, and progressive difficulty.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (5:04)
“When we say, ‘somebody has a great instinct for it,’ well, that’s where we now say, ‘ok, let’s try to figure out exactly what that is.’” - Dr. Peter Fadde (6:32)
“Some guys like to have success at every level and build it up. And some guys just like to identify the wall they want to go through and then start smacking it.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (14:41)
“The best way to practice recognizing pitches is to look at pitches.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (30:56)
“A softball hitter really focusing on and getting good at pitch recognition could be looking at at a 20 or 25% improvement.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (51:20)
Resources Mentioned:
Ahead of the Curve Podcast
@AOTC_podcast
peterfadde.com
gameSense Sports
Twitter: @DrFadde
Email: [email protected]
Website and Social Media sites for the show
www.aotcpodcast.com
4.8
213213 ratings
This episode is brought to you by baseballcloud and OnBaseU.
Guest: Dr. Peter Fadde, Chief Officer and Co-Founder of gameSense, and Associate Professor of Learning Systems Design & Technology at Southern Illinois University
Dr. Fadde explains the benefits of occlusion training
Dillan Lawson’s presentation at Slugfest used a soccer player kicking a goal with the lights turned off 2/3 of the way to teach occlusion training
What is “pitch recognition” and how is it different from “plate discipline?”
Dr. Fadde’s occlusion training offers the batter’s view point facing the pitcher with a maximum possible score of 250
Video cued tee work is tee work that includes the timing off of the pitcher
Hitting baseballs is not like hitting golf balls or baseballs off of a tee
Vision training focuses on visual skills like dynamic tracking, acuity, peripheral vision, and focus
Pitch recognition should help hitters get the feel of the pitcher’s wind-up
If you aren’t looking at a pitcher, then it isn’t really pitch recognition
Live drills for hitters to call out “yes” or “no” on a particular pitch type before the ball hits the catcher’s mitt strengthens pitch recognition
The best form of pitch recognition is standing in the bullpen
Mike Schmidt wrote a fantastic books on hitting
Attention occlusion drills should keep the batter focusing on the pitcher, not the catcher
gameSense certified their first hitting coach Coach Killian at Elite Velocity in St. Louis, Missouri
Softball is getting a boast again from entering into the Olympics
Pitch recognition is the perceptual skill of making an actionable meaning out of the pitch you see.
Your eyes can’t track pitch speeds over 83 miles an hour all the way into the bat.
Visualize the pitcher. Visualize the pitch. Visualize hitting that pitch.
“If you can test it, you can train it.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (4:53)
“Human beings, and other animals, can learn incredible things with repetition, immediate feedback, and progressive difficulty.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (5:04)
“When we say, ‘somebody has a great instinct for it,’ well, that’s where we now say, ‘ok, let’s try to figure out exactly what that is.’” - Dr. Peter Fadde (6:32)
“Some guys like to have success at every level and build it up. And some guys just like to identify the wall they want to go through and then start smacking it.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (14:41)
“The best way to practice recognizing pitches is to look at pitches.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (30:56)
“A softball hitter really focusing on and getting good at pitch recognition could be looking at at a 20 or 25% improvement.” - Dr. Peter Fadde (51:20)
Resources Mentioned:
Ahead of the Curve Podcast
@AOTC_podcast
peterfadde.com
gameSense Sports
Twitter: @DrFadde
Email: [email protected]
Website and Social Media sites for the show
www.aotcpodcast.com
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