Ask the Coach at Baseball Tips: Hitting

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Ask the Coach
Coach Arnald A Youth player asks:
I am hearing a lot of things about torque. Can you explain to me what torque is and the spots it can be applied to in your swing?


Coach Swift answers:
Torque really is just another word for bat speed. We create torque by getting our hips turned out of the way and our back elbow tucked in, along with keeping our lead arm straight and behind our hip turn. Then at the point of contact we turn our wrists over, which creates the snap that is needed to hit the ball hard.

No matter what they look like, all swings must have three things in common:

  1. A step toward the pitcher
  2. The opening up of the hips parallel to the ball
  3. A swing with the hands in front of the bat pulling it through the strike zone (not pushing it) and the wrist snap.

To create torque on any good swing the steps have to occur in that order.
Step - Turn - Swing

All of these things are done quickly, and you can't be slow with any one of them or your bat speed is diminished.



Have a Baseball Question Ask the coach
Coach Arnald Swift is the Director of Customer Relations at Baseball Tips. He joined the staff in 2003 after retiring from the high school coaching ranks in Colorado. If you have a question you'd like Coach Swift to answer, send an e-mail to baseballtips@gmail.com.





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