Do you think it makes it easier for scouts to evaluate hitters since hitters have to actually hit balls on the sweet part of the bat only?
Also, how do BBCOR bats compare to wood?
Printable View
Do you think it makes it easier for scouts to evaluate hitters since hitters have to actually hit balls on the sweet part of the bat only?
Also, how do BBCOR bats compare to wood?
I have always heard that although the sweet spot on a wood bat is smaller (than a BBCOR) - when the ball comes off the sweet spot of a wood bat - it comes off faster from wood.....
I would like to know if anyone else has heard this......Power is power - regardless of the bat, the bat speed is what it's all about. Most SEC hitters have a bat speed of 90+ mph..they measure this at most camps with a radar gun.
Easier compared to before? Probably. You have to remember that scouts go to these summer wood bat leagues and evaluate a lot as well and some have college hitters hit in front of them with a wood bat in batting practice sometimes and things like that.
Pretty much everyone I talk to tells me that BBCOR is worse than wood. Unless you are swinging Cajun Swamp specials.
Hijack sort of- MLB is supposed to start tracking bat speed as part of their baseball broadcasts in the very near future. Why they haven't before, I don't know. They've tracked pitcher velocity for years.
I think that might help with the power epidemic because it's going to show kids and college players how fast you have to swing a bat at that level to succeed and hit with power. Sort of like how the radar gun readings have indirectly lead to more pitchers throwing hard and Web Gems on ESPN caused more of a focus on defensive play.
No lie, I did that for a summer and it definitely helps. Not sure to the extent but it was a noticeable difference for me anyway. As far as wood vs BBCOR I have always preferred wood. BBCOR bats just seem like they're dead to me, even when you hit the sweet spot. Not to mention, I believe wood makes you more selective and more focused on the fundamentals of your swing. Maybe its just a mindset
If someone thinks wood has more pop than BBCOR they are an idiot...plain and simple.
A lot of folks are mislead because guys go to rookie or A ball and have more HRs than in college. This is due to the baseball and, most importantly, the fact that the pitching faced at that level is generally below SEC pitching.
BBCOR is the most comparable to wood than any bat used before in college and high school obviously. I personally wish, on the high school level, they should go back to BESR. Much more fair on that level. I a pitcher makes a mistake they should get punished. Right now the long ball has been almost removed from the game and that is not a good thing.
The thing about wood is that it forces a hitter to have their hands in the correct position at contact. Any minor error in mechanics is amplified with wood. The weight distribution also affects this.
I would think strengthening legs and improving flexibility in your hips and even using a leg kick and how you get fully extended with stride and arms would improve bat speed more than strengthening arms and wrists. The muscles in your core and legs are much stronger and bigger in these areas than in your arms and you generate more power from them as well. A strong base and explosive hips will create way more power than popeye forearms. Popeye forearms do help though.
Bat speed comes from hands and wrist. No doubt that strong lower body can add to the power but bat speed itself is generated in the hands.
Watch an old clip of hank Aaron swing. A lot of times his back foot may be off the ground at contact so he's not using a whole lot of lower body. His pop came from his ridiculously strong hands and wrists.
legs and hips give you power, arms and wrists generate bat speed and also add to pop