Training; Free Agent Signing; Coaching

Posted on March 6th, 2008 in coaching, working out, side session-kyle by Kyle

Training

Jacob, Vinny, and I have been training extensively for the past few months. Vinny has transformed from a slow-pitch softball hitter into a power hitting outfielder, and though his tools are still raw, he can certainly put a charge in any fastball left middle-in and down (his favorite spot). Jacob has been training harder than ever since he switched into a job with much less stress and more steady hours, and I have been taking my diet and exercise plan a lot more seriously over the past two weeks. All of the work I have done on swing training through tee work, soft toss, and video analysis (with the aid of Dr. Chris Yeager’s materials) has finally paid off, IMO. I have learned valuable cues (keeping the hands with the shoulders and turning them together; pushing against the ground with a strong front leg block) and I have turned my line drive swing into a classic power stroke.

Today Vinny and I dialed up the two-wheel JUGS machine (something I used to hate) and hit a bunch of fastballs and some sick late-breaking curveballs outs of it. I crushed a ton of pitches after I made the adjustments in my swing that need to be there (again, hands high, a more athletic stance, a better strong block of linear momentum), and I feel that I am 90% of the way to the ideal swing for me.

Free Agent Signing

Both Jacob and I (along with Jensen) were signed before tryouts to play for the Adams division of PSSBL, an intermediate level of competition. They signed us on the strength of our ability to go 7 IP, a testament to the endurance training Jacob and I have followed for months. Both Jacob and I turned in a good tryouts on the mound. My fastball command was better than it ever has been, my changeup was still great, but my breaking (Maxline pronation curve) ball was erratic and inconsistent. There were times when it looked great, and times when it stayed flat, or worse, was way above the catcher’s head. I attribute my failures with the pitch mostly due to inexperience, and I hope to throw a bunch of them tomorrow and over the weekend during individual and team tryouts.

Coaching

Coaching Roosevelt HS Freshmen has been a wonderful experience. Not only am I staying with a lot of the kids from Northeast Seattle Little League, but the team of 18 kids that we have are extremely talented and well-mannered. We have a lot of pitching on the team (some of which will invariably be called up to JV, unfortunately), and the defense is top-notch. We even have a real catcher with his own gear, a good pop time, and a live arm. Our lineup is pretty damn good, featuring a switch hitter and several lefties. I think we’ll compete for first place in the division very easily, depending on the number of kids called up to JV.

Individual coaching of Vinny has also been great! His work ethic matches my own, and he went from being unable to make contact on 20 straight side soft tossed balls to being able to shell Jacob and I from a mound on any given day. I have mostly imparted the wisdom of Chris Yeager on him, but video analysis of my own has proved to help him as well - another testament to the idea that learning by seeing ourselves on video is one of the best (and most underused) tools in baseball today.

February Workout Summary

Posted on March 3rd, 2008 in coaching, working out, goals, stats by Jacob

February was a month of spectacular change for me. It seems like the concept of writing things down has held me accountable (writing here has helped, too) for my habits, for better or worse. I haven’t been tracking my weight, but the grabbiness of my flabbiness has all but disappeared, and I can get to the sixth and final belt hole on my 36″ pants holder-upper. I have changed my job to one that more fits my lifestyle, and that has improved my general well being also. My job change also has enabled me to volunteer with the local little league here downtown, something I have always wanted to continue doing.

The stats of my workouts this month are in line with the gains I had last month. I only missed two days of stretching, my last and first days at my old and new jobs. My task load increased 75% (24 last month to 42 this month), my percentage of a workout on any given day rose 11% to 69% and my time spent running rose 66% to nine hours forty minutes for the month. Here’s the chart:

February Workout Summary

I kept everything pretty balanced as far as hitting and pitching were concerned this month, with only a dash of fielding practice at the end. It’s only now getting to be warm enough to get quality practice in during the twilight hours. As the PSSBL gets rolling, I will most certainly mix much more defense in there, including PFP.

One week till tryouts!

January Workout Summary

Posted on February 6th, 2008 in working out, goals by Jacob

While things are heating up here at baseballdelusions, the weather is still friggin cold outside. Even in the Seattle area we saw snow multiple times below the 500 foot line, so I guess my Michigan skin has finally worn off… because I’m complaining about it just like a normal Seattleite. I still drive infinitely better than these crazies in the snow, though!

My workouts have seen a transition this last month. Something about writing it all down on a calendar every day has made me much more consistent. I have rid myself of about half of my beer-blubber, and even though I’m not tracking my body weight, I am several steps closer to pitching condition.

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My stretching percentage went up 34 ticks to 68% and my rate of days worked out jumped from 23 to 55%. My total tasks rose from 8.5 to 24, a 282% increase. It’ll be impossible to see these sort of gains over and over again, but I feel like they are closer to becoming habits.

I have kept my diet pretty much static through this whole exercise, with the exception of limiting myself to just a few beers each night. No more big drinky for Jacob. Sigh… the sacrifices that one must endure for weight loss.

Another Kickass Workout Session

Posted on February 6th, 2008 in working out, side session-kyle by Kyle

I woke up early today and got in a kickass workout session with Jacob that lasted all day.

10:30 AM - Swimming laps until our lungs were on fire (didn’t take me long, I’m out of shape!)
11:15 AM - Sat in the hot tub, felt good on my sore legs from the previous day’s workout
11:30 AM - Taught Jacob how to do one-arm DB snatches and high pulls; in return, he showed me medball toss on a decline bench. Tons of reps of all the aforementioned exercises, plus static stretching.

After that, we went to Paseo Caribbean Grill (where Jacob had never been) and enjoyed a Midnight Cuban Press and a Chicken Breast sandwich. Can’t believe that place has been closed for over 2 months. So good to have it back!

Two hours rest time, then it’s time to hit the batting cages at Arena Sports. Both Jacob and I had arms that felt really good, and his curve has turned into something nasty. It now has a lot of overspin, comes in waist-high, then just falls off the table. It looks way different than his previous curve - which was good! - and should be infinitely more effective. He seems to retain his original get-me-over variant as well for weak contact and first pitch strikes, so with that curve ball package, his very consistent slider with excellent lateral break, all he has to do is figure out how he’s getting his arm-side run with his two-seam fastball. Once he pieces it all together, he’ll have three absolutely dangerous weapons to attack the zone with.

My arm felt really good, and I threw a bunch before the mitigating circumstances forced us off the mound and into another cage, but from what I was doing, my fastball was popping a bit more than usual (both torque and maxline variants), and I was experimenting with a high arm slot that seemed to work fairly well. Hopefully I can replicate this with a friend on Thursday, or maybe even Jacob later today. My pronation slider is developing at a fast rate; I saw it slash through the zone with excellent depth and decent lateral break. Starting the pitches from a supinated grip has helped me with all of my pitches: I get better and more consistent releases with my fastball with some sink to it, I get a lot of sink on my change, and I have been getting a ton of spin on my slider as a result of going from supinated to pronated. Marshall was right there, that’s for damn sure.

As far as our velocities, I’m not sure where we’re at. I don’t want to measure it because we both have major flaws that we know of, and we want to get those under control before we release video to the YouTube public (they sure do love Dick Mills there, don’t they?) and to this blog. My biggest flaw is my timing right before, at, and right after footstrike. I need to keep my shoulders closed while firing the hips, so I can preserve the idea of rotating body segments which will deliver the power through my body, across my acromial line, and through my arm.

If I had to hazard a guess on what Jake’s major flaw is, I’d say it would be the fact that he pauses a bit too long at max leg lift. Like Carlos Gomez of Hardball Times, I prefer to see drifting into footplant, rather than sitting over the rubber. This helps generate momentum down the hill, which adds to velocity and cuts out time for mechanical errors. I’m sure he has his own view on it, though, and hope he posts about it.

Time to get some sleep. Early start tomorrow (10 AM is early for me) - running, stretching, prepping some clean food, maybe throwing some with Jake, and then I have Roosevelt High School baseball meetings at 5:45 PM.

Workout Logs

Posted on February 4th, 2008 in working out by Kyle

I’m keeping a written journal of my workout log, and I’ll try to update this blog with it as well. Here was today’s workout at 24 Hour Fitness:

Warm-up: 3 min elliptical trainer, static stretching, star jumps

2 sets 7×100 Cable woodchop, Low to High
2 sets 5×20 Balance step-ups, each leg
4 sets Squats:
-5×100
-5×150
-5×200
-3×220
2 sets 5×30 One-arm DB snatch (learning this exercise, hence the low weight)
3 sets 5×60 Standard Lunges (each leg)
3×7 Standard push-ups
1×25 Ab bench, standard
1×25 Ab bench, crunch
3 sets 10×85 Seated Row (2 supinated, 1 pronated)
1.0 mile run @ 5.0 mph, 0.1 mile sprint @ 8.5 mph

Kyle’s Swing, November/December ‘07

Posted on February 4th, 2008 in pictures, video by Kyle

Kyle’s Swing, December 07

I gotta be honest, I don’t really hate this swing (despite not-great contact)! I was practicing Dr. Yeager’s walk-up drills to help translate linear momentum into rotational momentum, and I learned a lot in doing so.

What I don’t like are my hands being lazy, trying to wrap around the ball, and poor uncocking of the wrists at the point of contact.

After looking at a bunch of video, I think I realized a big problem of mine is “drifting” forward after lead footplant. To stop that, I need to push against the ground more. That should stop the drifting, the poor contact, and should increase power. We’ll see tomorrow - hopefully more video to follow!

Brandon Webb: Nasty Sinker

Posted on January 31st, 2008 in video by Kyle

I probably have posted this before, but I can’t help it. This is what I want my changeup to look like, and for what it’s worth, most people who have seen it say it has plus-rated depth for the league I’m in. Most of my catchers don’t want me to throw it to same-side hitters, but I’m going to work it in there more often this year because it’s definitely my best pitch.

Side Session - 1/30

Posted on January 30th, 2008 in working out, gyroball, side session-kyle by Kyle

I hit and threw today with Jacob at Arena Sports, where we got about an hour’s worth of work in. We focused mainly on dead-arm soft toss for hitting and threw from the mound a bit after working with the wrist weights. Both Jacob and I noticed better spin axes on our pitches after working with Marshall’s plans, but we both lost consistency with our breaking pitches (his curve, my gyroball). That being said, Jacob’s slider is getting much, much better - he is getting excellent tilt and depth to it, and he threw his best one ever (in my opinion) today. Great lateral break and excellent depth.

After incorporating some of Marshall’s theories on pitching (pendulum swing, loaded slingshot position), I have noticed an increase in velocity when throwing from the traditional motion. I have started to combine the theories of Mills and Marshall to increase the stretch reflex in my lower half while simultaneously driving the ball with early supination and late pronation. The results feel good right now, I will say that much, but I need to start doing more push-ups and conditioning of my arm to maintain shoulder integrity throughout the season. My lightweight SPRI bands were chewed up by my cats, and I’m stuck with only a heavy band. What I need is multiple reps with light weights and varying degrees of resistance to build endurance in my arm.

One thing I am working very hard on to improve my control is the combination of pointing the acromial line (shoulder plane) towards the target and getting the feeling of “sprinting” down the mound; both of these cues are Marshall-esque in nature.

As for hitting, I am crushing soft toss but having a few problems with overhand toss at lower speeds (60 mph). My timing is poor; my front foot is blocking late and as a result, I’m letting outside strikes go by and getting jammed inside unnecessarily. It’s time to hit the video and watch Yeager’s DVDs again to help fix that problem!

Kyle’s Spring Training

Posted on January 29th, 2008 in working out, goals by Kyle

Jacob wrote an excellent post on how he trains in the offseason, and it inspired me to write one of my own. Jacob and I went to the American Baseball Institute held at Rijo Athletics in Woodinville, WA, to get information on training with them and to see their pitchers throw. What I saw was an unbelievable talent level - pitchers throwing 92+ using Dr. Mike Marshall’s techniques with plus to plus-plus breaking balls by any measure of analysis. Unfortunately, due to both the cost and the time commitment, Jacob cannot participate in the program. I have opted not to continue practicing with them after a single session; this decision was made because the level of training their pitchers go through is not something I can sustain at my current fitness level. Their facility trains real MLB-level players, and the difficulty of training matches that philosophy.

For the next two months, I will be adjusting my diet to one that embraces both high-protein and low-calorie components to it.

My training has changed largely due to my experiences at ABI; in utilizing both the hybridized and the regular Marshall pitching mechanics, I find myself able to throw on a daily basis with no arm/shoulder pain. I experience soreness as I would when I lift weights, but not the type of ache where it would be physically damaging if I were to throw pitches at my maximum velocity. Marshall’s mechanics have enabled me to throw two quality breaking balls (pronation slider, gyroball) and when I am getting my arm up to driveline height early and translating my forward momentum well, my control is very good. Since this is all new to me, I am still working out the kinks, but I strongly believe in what Marshall teaches.

Working out for me is something that I do enjoy to do, but the results aren’t there because of my less than ideal diet. I have started eating a lot of skinless chicken (prepared in various ways), baked potatoes (not that great for you, but not terrible), and clean sources of protein and complex carbohydrates. On a daily basis, I will do the following:

  • Utilize 8 lb. wrist weights to perform various arm/shoulder exercises (wrong foot drill, external rotation drill) as well as just getting loose
  • Throw 30-50 pitches into a net, mainly fastballs
  • Various bodyweight exercises (sit-ups, push-ups, dips) and static stretching
  • Various SPRI band exercises (though not as extensive as Jacob!) involving my shoulders and arms

I need to get back into a better rhythm when it comes to compound lifts, and I am shooting for a 3 day/week program that focuses heavily on deadlifts, squats, and cable cross exercises. I will also work harder on running 2 miles every other day, as well as adding sprints and plyometrics into my workout regimen (which I hate).

Tuesdays and Wednesdays are baseball-oriented workouts with some combination of Jacob, Jensen, and Vinny at Arena Sports, Strike-Zone, or, preferably, outdoors. We typically focus on soft toss and 45-foot overhand batting practice, as well as throwing full bullpens for Jacob and I. These are my favorite days of the week! If I can find the time, I will try to add in another day of hitting machine BP at Strike-Zone just to work on my swing and to see more fastballs.

My supplements that I will be taking on a daily basis are ErgoLean’s AMP (fat loss), a standard multi-vitamin with BCAAs, a Optimum Nutrition protein shake, and possibly Creatine Monohydrate.

I am entering the 2008 PSSBL draft and my goal is to be drafted as a relief pitcher and an infielder in the Adams division (intermediate), playing alongside with my Rocky division Mariners. I haven’t yet decided if I want to exclude myself from the Olympic division, but it’s unlikely that I would be chosen to play at the top levels regardless.

Spring Training for Amateurs

Posted on January 29th, 2008 in culture, theory, commentary, working out, goals by Jacob

Pitchers and catchers are to report to their major league camps in a few weeks, but most of us amateur ballplayers don’t have nearly the time, resources or work ethic to train like professionals do. Going to the ABI with Kyle the other week really drove that point home. The ABI training was in a very professional manner, with a very professional price… both in time and money. Understanding this is easy; it takes absolutes of time, effort and resolve to change yourself into a MLB prospect. The whole thing made me want to be 21 and fresh off the bus to Seattle… but I’m neither. So my focus during the visit was to soak up as many drills and as much culture as I could during those few hours. It has definitely affected the way Kyle and I work out, and now that I’ve received my official release from the Red Sox (by my request) I have tryouts to train for.

I really like some of the pitching philosophies we heard about at ABI, though I think it’s disappointing that the ‘philosopher’ himself, Dr. Mike Marshall, carries such a negative stigma. But hey, I’ve been a black sheep myself my whole life and never doubted the validity of my thought and ideas, so we have some common ground. Aside from being completely single minded, compulsive and utterly confident, I think ‘Doc’ has some good things to add to the game. What Dr. Marshall has failed to embrace is that baseball is about results and relationships. This former Cy Young winner seems to be solely focused on the former with little regard to the latter. Some folks are scientists, others are diplomats. Very rarely are they both.

So unless an earth shattering blog-for-training agreement is reached between myself and ABI, I won’t be training there. I will however be using some of the tech I learned there in my preparation for this season. Don’t get me wrong I would love to train there, but the specific time of the workouts is impossible for me to accommodate without giving up my career. The cost was also too high monetarily for myself, but if the goal was a pro baseball contract it could seem reasonable. So I’ve had to come up with an adaptive solution, an extension of the realizations that I’ve been coming to on how to prepare for my season.

December 2007 Training Sheet

From throwing a curveball to learning how to run a successful business I’ve always been the kind of person who needs to be able visually see something in order to retain it. Therefore my low-tech approach to training is based on of some calendars printed off of my Imac. I’ve developed a little system of notation that becomes bigger as I progress through the months before tryouts and become more active. An ‘X’ through the date marks a day on which I stretched out really well, it’s the baseline for all workouts. An ‘O’ around it means nothing was done at all that day. Workout sets are usually denoted with two letters and a number, indicating the exercise and the intensity. For example, ‘BP1′ means ‘bullpen 1′ or 25-30 pitches to location after a thorough warm-up. December 2007 was a very light month for me workout wise, I was going to physical therapy for shoulder tendinitis and working a freakishly busy retail job 50 hours a week (with split weekends). I stretched only 9 of 31 days, and only averaged 1.5 workouts per week. Pretty tame.

Tame, yes… but a baseline nonetheless. This month has been much better, I’ll post it after we’re into February. Writing this all down has definitely provided feedback on how hard I actually work, and it has given me a incremental way to better myself.