Just bear with me because this is going to be a lot. Okay, this is what I was talking about, more focal. Again, focal prefers detail, so I'm breathing.
I can pay attention to the pitcher the whole time when I'm hitting. Okay, so if I'm vertical focal, I would just stare at that pitcher up and down. Okay, then go to release. If I was global, I would...
go maybe the batter's eye either vertically or horizontally and bring it back to release from there. And then when you talk about the visions, right? So if an aerial sees better up, the lower the release, the more I have to bring my chin angle down.
So I don't know if you guys watch this play, but if you saw Matt Shaw last year, he would literally go here and set himself up every time for his chin angle and his eyes. It was pretty cool to see someone who's severely bought into everything. Okay, vision dial.
So we talked about this. Depending on your motor eye, this is even for opponents. I'll know just based off how they're walking and moving.
Okay, so if it's an aerial with a left or right motor eye, I already know what their vision dial, their best vision in each zone is. I don't need track man. I already know what their preferences are based off their motor eye and if they're aerial or terrestrial. Okay, so most of the aerials will see better up. Most of the terrestrials will see better down.
Okay. So you can focus and use cue points and you'll see when we go inside later how we do the up and down pitches just as maintenance every day with their pronation supination bias. So what I found too is it says you see zone four requires the most focus.
When you give athletes answers to their tests that's all they've ever wanted and they believe that they don't have a weakness and they have something tangible to know what they need to do on that pitch that they don't like. It's no longer a weakness. They feel better about it because they feel confident enough on something they need to know.
When they don't know and they're just searching and hoping, that's when you get that gray area for baseball players. It's always really, really tough to coach. Okay, so summary of what we're kind of seeing.
You're seeing someone very terrestrial and anchored like a Mike Trout. And you can see Griffey, both of his heels are actually off the ground in rotation. Barry Bonds, also someone very, very aerial. okay did not anchor I'm saying disassociated and associated down there okay you're seeing large axial up top and then asymmetrical is like I was telling you for the aerials okay we need to just keep understanding there is no one way let's just find the best for the individual and give some freedom for that okay