Quote:
Originally Posted by RoDeO
(Post 3645688)
Well, they are close, not identical. My point wad that you can't actually pick up a hammer and try to throw it like you do with a disc, it just doesn't work. Doing the drill to get a feeling for the legs and body might be good but just forget the whole arm action part, it's different.
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I get that if you pull the hammer into the power pocket it’s gonna hit you in the chest, I’ll give you that and didn’t deny that will happen.
The main point here though is that you don’t pull the disc into the power pocket. It is brought there because of momentum created by leverage from the lower body, the ground, and gravity. Your elbow never breaks 90 degrees-in fact, many players (myself included) don’t bring it in anywhere close to 90 degrees. From the front it looks that way because of camera angles, but from a top view the tension is never let off of the triceps
I’m sure you’ve done bench press before.
When the weight is lowered, you’re not pulling it down with your lats, posterior deltoids and biceps. You’re keeping tension, and allowing the weight to lower itself. That’s what the “power pocket” is. The tension is lowered, but never released, with the triceps, and then is suddenly heightened at the hit, where the triceps extend. Your biceps are never recruited, therefore you cannot pull the disc or hammer towards you. I know it may seem silly but seriously, draw a feee body diagram of a McBeth, Garrett Gurthie, Simon Lizotte, etc etc and you’ll see what I’m talking about.
To drive the point home, you’re doing the hammer drill incorrectly-it’s supposed to allow you to get the feel of leveraging the disc.
Just like weight training. You slowly do things with large weights so you can do them quickly and more efficiently.
I was a collegiate caliber sprinter. That is the definition of needing pure speed over strength.
Even I worked out, ran drills, etc etc because they trained me for when the gun shot off.
Do you need a deadlift motion to run? No. Did it drop my times significantly because of built up strength and control? Absolutely.
That’s what drills do. They get the fundamentals down so you can know what it feels like. The hammer drill is a drill that teaches what muscles are used and helps you weed out the muscles that aren’t supposed to be used.