Date: August 17th, 2025 9:36 PM
Author: blue talented reading party nursing home
The most important fundamentals for batting are the grip, the stance, and the swing.
He should be lining up his knuckles when he grips the bat. That’s rule #1.
You need to find out if he’s swinging too early or too late and you can tell by watching him swing and miss and also what side of the field he hits it.
Since he’s right handed a little early will be on third base side and late on first base side.
If he’s early have him use a heavier bat and vice versa.
Back elbow should be up, parallel to the ground.
The single most important part of the swing is rotating his hips. That’s where the speed and power come from, not the arms.
The hips turn the body and the arms are along for the ride.
Second most important thing is to keep his head steady and keep his eyes on the ball. Debatable that this is more important than the hips.
Rotate hips, keep head steady, eyes on the ball through contact.
Tell him he needs to run through first base even if he’s thrown out by a mile. Never stop before reaching first base and head back to the dugout, that is a cardinal sin. Always run through first base and sprint doing it.
Pete Rote use to literally sprint to first when he walked, sprinted everywhere.
When inning is over, sprint to dugout or sprint to position on the field.
If he’s pitching and gives up a home run and the next time that batter comes to the plate, if he’s taking a little longer than normal to set up, adjusting his helmet, digging his feet in the dirt, etc., throw it at his head.
He’s maybe a little too young for that one, might want to wait until he’s ten to teach him that.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5763462&forum_id=2)#49193189)