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Two Ballplayers

For baseball players who want to improve their power, you've come to the right place.

You'll learn that high power and a high batting average are one-in-the-same.

The The Science of the Baseball Swing, after SIX chapters of step-by-step familiarizing you with the details and your swing, finally puts it all together in the Field Guide: Power Summary section in just a few book-pages.

These information-packed pages focus on the above snapshots of Chris Rahl (Harrisburg Senators) and JD Drew, among others. Chris will hit to straight-away center field, and JD Drew will get a base hit to the opposite field. The ball is just a few feet in front of the plate, yet their bat-head is still pointing behind them. That's exactly what you want.

The Power Summary will explain what has happened up to this point (The Past), the choices you have at this moment (The Present), and finally what exactly you do to both add more power and bring the sweet spot to the baseball (The Future).

The process you use to actually hit the ball are exactly the things that give you power. Thus both your average and your power increase simultaneously.

Learn what pull-hitting really means. Learn how to maximize its benefits. Learn the secrets of having power to the opposite field. Learn the benefits of choking up so you can employ this as a powerful tool. Learn much more.

Finally the Power Summary describes what to focus on in the weight room - - including the ratio of weight "upstairs vs. downstairs". The latter is new technology based on what we've learned via the physics of the swing.

Timing is Everything...

Timing is everything in baseball. The same goes here.
"Get your book now, well before the season begins. "

mickey mantle

Mickey Mantle says he went 0 for 30 after an All-Star game where Ted Williams hammered him for information. Mickey was perhaps the game's greatest switch hitter, and Ted seized the moment to both question him, and mentor him, about the roles of his arms. (Ted Williams was academically very interested in the swing, and eventually wrote the first book on hitting instruction.)

The point is Mickey Mantle was thinking too much (about his arms) when he went up to the plate, and that's why he went 0 for 30.

Don't make the same mistake. Don't procrastinate.

Get your book early, and make your adjustments early - - well before the season begins.

Timing is everything. ..... Order Now.

jason bay

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