Originally posted by don_budge
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Number one mistake that hinders any type of stroke development is soft/passive "backswing" mechanics.
I call this all "load” mechanics."
I rate a lot of players 2/10 in this area, and no emphasis is ever placed on it. A guy that was really well trained in this area is a player you did not like Andre Agassi - and his father was a professional Olympic feather-weight fighter - Andre's ability to prep before the ball even bounced was a difference maker.
So, I take a cart - 600 balls, pound them right into an athletes feet hard and with a lot of pace and tell them to quickly get to a dynamic prepped position loaded position. I don't let them hit the ball - its all about 600 reps of getting to an absolutely loaded position where I will then be able to then set them up to achieve the best hip rotational speed possible ... rhythm will come naturally in the drills/games when when you first teach them the right positioning to flow out correctly out of (which is where Mike Agassi was successful as a coach).
So, let's talk a bit about the ribs/breathing because that is important. I am 47 - I do not even have to work out to have good base level functional useful strength. Why? I am 6'4 and have a huge wide ribcage. So, I know how to use it, and generating power easily. No matter how old I get, I still maintain that strength and it never dips on me. Old man power I call it - as you get older you learn to breathe, relax and become more aware/focused. You need to - the big trick is to train that into a young athlete to be less chaotic in the initiation motion and not fight/force/jerk/strain but flow.
At our age Don_Budge - we are experienced enough to understand the importance of being purposeful. With kids - that is a challenge to instill - but, possible.
So, look at Moe Norman/Babe Ruth/Mark McGuire/Harmon Killebrew - loading to power is easy for them - they can leverage off their ribcage, and if you ever notice their bellybutton positioning is always perfect - well - we discussed that a long time ago about the correlation of bellybutton to the net tape and how that gets balls over the net.
The worst injury a hockey/MMA fighter can is a concussion - but, their are a lot of guys performing that should not be performing with that issue unfortunately. But, ribcage is the kiss of death - you want to see the importance of what I talk about remember what it was like with a rib muscle pull or a broken rib. I remember one guy playing through a broken rib and a flak jacket in the NHL Playoffs (Kevin Lowe) - not the best player but he is in the hall of fame because he was able to do that kind of thing and has five Stanley Cup's to his credit as a result. Just a beast in the defensive end - but, his rib cage was like Ray Bourque's/Bobby Hull's/Gordie Howe's and just not of this earth.
Now, I know you are not 6'4 – and built like Babe Ruth or Moe Norman – however, be like Pavarotti and leverage that rib cage. It's the best analogy. Mike Agassi's legacy - he trained a boxers prep into one of his four kids - 1/4 - like him or hate him Agassi's prep and ability to dissipate force after hitting made him into a very special player despite not having great tools in several performance areas.
Now – if you have a mother with a big rib cage then you are ahead in the power game – after all, athletes learn to breath in the womb. Breathing is the source of power, and you get it from mom at a young age - I got a 14 year old Russian athlete I train from Central Red Army hockey team, and his mama is 5'8 and over 200 pounds - so strong, and her rib cage is like an opera singer. We're developing a lot of things with him, and he is easy to balance out. The kid is 6'1, and has the same build as mom which is a plus. I know he will be durable like Alexander Ovechkin. Talk about Ovechkin - guy never follows a diet, eats what he wants, slightly overweight like Babe Ruth but no one better in terms of a bear rib cage or rate of force production which is the name of the game in this business. His load to power on his one timer slap shot tells you all you need to know - and, of course his front side mechanics look better than anyone else's because he initiates better than anyone else. It's no big magic formula here why his release point looks magical and he can always drive the object (puck, tennis ball, hand, golf ball) on the right line of attack to target (hockey net, head, ribs, golf hole, backline deep, straight line to target ETC).
So, think a little bit like Moe Norman/Bear/Pavorotti/ribcage and generate power.
You're pull mechanics - load mechanics trumps all - front side mechanics we see are just an icing on the cake - build to front side end speed is my philosophy.
Hey, watch the new Mike Tyson video - pretty interesting to see how he has kept the power - it will be interesting to see how he is able to take hard body shots to the ribs at close to 50. I like nothing more than getting into the MMA cage and working on a young guys ribs in sparring - just pick it apart - the guy that did the Rocky Movie where Rocky hit ribs of meat - perfect - love it.
Tyson was so good at softening up guys here in the day when he had old school Cus working with him ...
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