Slow The Game Down Dr Bill Harrison

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  3. Slow The Game Down By Dr Bill Harrison

SlowTheGameDown® Performance Training Program INDIVIDUAL - GROUP - TEAM SlowTheGameDown will provide players the benefit of their experience with professional and college players and teams.

Bill Harrison is internationally known for his pioneering work in Sports Vision Science. Errors and breakdowns in game conditions are not due to mechanica. 2 years ago Read. Since July 1st Brad is 42 for 105 hitting.400. Brad started the season slow with a 0-30 streak but has since brought his avg. Brad has been training. Bill Harrison enjoys a well-known international reputation as a vision and sports pioneer in worldwide sporting circles. Through the years he has worked with athletes, coaches and teams in most every sport, at the professional, collegiate and amateur. Authored by Dr. Bill Harrison Authored with Ryan Harrison Edition: 1 This unique book will be an 'Eye Opener' as you learn in depth key components of the 'visual side of the game,' and how it helps the mental and physical sides of the game. See who you know at SlowTheGameDown, leverage your professional network, and get hired. Bill Harrison View profile. Slow The Game Down provides player development program specializing. Key Insights to Improved Baseball Performance by Dr. Bill Harrison New York Mets first baseman Carlos Delgado, a sixteen year MLB veteran, after two years of struggling,had a major trans­formation in his hitting performance this past season. Through June he was hitting.228 with a slugging average of.419. 3 Vision Drills with Sean Casey on MLB Network with SlowTheGameDown Ryan Harrison and Dr. Bill Harrison SlowTheGameDown shared a post. December 4 at 8:38 AM.

DENVER — Before he closes his book, San Francisco Giants outfielder Hunter Pence stares and stares at a card marking his page.

It is an eye exercise, designed to merge two three-dimensional circles into one shape.

The task is trickier than it sounds, and Pence said helps him to differentiate a tailing fastball from a nasty slider.

Just as Colorado third baseman Nolan Arenado believes playing table tennis sharpens his eye-hand coordination and his teammate Charlie Blackmon credits the video game “Call of Duty” for his sizzling start. The longtime major leaguer Ellis Burks used to stare at a candle in a darkened room to visualize locking onto a target.

Anything to help catch up with a pitch that arrives in less time than it takes to say “play ball.”

The baseball adage used to be “see ball, hit ball.” Really, though, it is more like “see ball, recognize and identify the pitch, figure out if it is worth taking a swing at and then hit ball.”

Players generally have about two-tenths of a second — the blink of an eye — to decide whether or not to swing. The human eye really is not fast enough to follow a 95-mile-per-hour fastball from the pitcher’s hand all the way to the plate.

“I’ve been around the game for 40 years, and it’s almost unbelievable that hitters can actually hit the opposing pitcher’s pitches the way they do,” said Dr. Bill Harrison, who works with numerous major and minor leaguers on improving their vision. “It’s a phenomenal capability.”

There are plenty of creative ways to train the brain to ensure the bat is in the right place and the eyes are spotting the right pitch. Some methods are learned from watching veterans around the clubhouse, others through word of mouth.

When Philadelphia’s first-base coach, Juan Samuel, was in the big leagues, he and Tony Fernandez used to pitch kernels of corn to each other and hit the seeds with a broomstick.

Slow the game down

Harrison has been teaching vision techniques since he first worked with George Brett, the Royals’ Hall of Famer. He says vision training is almost a hidden secret, especially with hitters focusing so much on the biomechanics of a swing. He instructs young hitters — like Miami’s Giancarlo Stanton — to follow the pitch all the way through to the catcher’s glove.

For instance, a two-seam fastball leaving a pitcher’s hand will have a spin pattern that resembles a railroad track, and a slider has a red-spot appearance.

“As they begin to know what pitches look like, they then pick it up early and project what it’s going to do,” Harrison said. “It goes from a visual process to a brain process. Our brain really is aware of things that we’re not consciously seeing.”

Eye-hand coordination is a big component, too, which is why Arenado enjoys table tennis. So does Seattle D.H. Corey Hart.

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Blackmon plays “Call of Duty” with his teammate D. J. LeMahieu.

“Improves reaction time, making us better hitters,” said Blackmon, who entered the weekend tied for fifth in the National League with a .329 batting average. “No game is ever the same and you make in-game adjustments, just like in baseball.”

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Burks is a legend around the Rockies’ clubhouse, with Drew Stubbs and Michael Cuddyer talking reverently about his honing his skills by staring at a flickering flame for five minutes in the dark. Burks said the routine — learned from a yoga instructor — bolstered his concentration.

“After staring at a candle, you can really lock onto a target,” said Burks, who spent 18 years in the big leagues.

Confidence helps, too.

“It’s weird, because when you’re feeling good at the plate and seeing the ball well, you recognize those pitches right away,” Stubbs said. “But when you’re scuffling, you don’t seem to see the spin at all.

Slow The Game Down By Dr Bill Harrison

“The more confidence you have, the more you can slow the ball down, track it and recognize it.”