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Article Series–Strength and Power for Baseball Players, Part 4

By MarkEagle | April 21, 2008

In part 3 of this series, I discussed general core strength and sport-specific core strength for baseball players. In this article, I will cover the basics of general strength and conditioning for baseball players. The most successful baseball players have adequate amounts of strength, power and speed.

Foundational Strength

Strength gains should be obtained in the off season and maintained during the season. During the off season, you have adequate time to strength train and recover. Maximal strength is not the goal here. Rather, the baseball player's objective is to achieve adequate core strength and limb strength to aid in training for sport-specific power. So, forget about lifting as much weight as you can (i.e., one-rep max) and concentrate on building full body strength and conditioning. Exercises such as dumbbell bench press, squats, step-ups, rows, shoulder press, lunges, etc. are used. Also, every baseball player needs a strong shoulder/rotator cuff of the throwing arm. There are a series of exercises designed to strengthen and stabilize this area. This will be covered in more detail in parts 5 and 6 of this series.

Muscle Growth (Hypertrophy)

The baseball player needs a certain amount of muscle growth but not so much as to inhibit playing the game with fluidity. Power is more important to achieve.

Power and Speed Development

Rate-of-force production or power (how fast your muscles can produce force) is one the best physical predictors of success in baseball and sports in general. Power is achieved by performing resistance and plyometric exercises at maximum effort. This type of training has great potential for injuries. So, it is imperative that the athlete have adequate core and body strength before starting power training.

The speed demands of baseball are: starting ability, acceleration, stopping, cutting, stride rate, stride length, sprinting form and speed endurance.

Most explosive movements occur after some other movement (swinging, sliding, etc.). Maximum velocity is rarely reached except in the case of hitting a triple, inside-the-park homerun or running down a long fly ball. Therefore, starting ability, acceleration and lateral speed should be emphasized during speed training.

Cardio Training

Long distance running for position players should be limited. Too much long distance running decreases speed. A player must train fast in order to get faster. A better alternative would be to do high intensity interval cardio training. This type of cardio training would consist of rotating sprints and walking/jogging. A good example would be to sprint for 30 seconds and walk or jog for 1 minute. Do this rotation for 20 minutes. This type of cardio training has been proven to produce superior heart health and fat burning results.

These aspects of baseball training will be covered in more detail in my coming eBook, "Strength and Power Training for Baseball Players."

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