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        thePeorian.com
      
      
        A quest to join the “Club”
      
      
        By Ken Brooke
      
      
        T
      
      
        he club I want to join is
      
      
        closed to outsiders. It
      
      
        has never heard of me.
      
      
        It doesn’t care about me. This is
      
      
        the story of my pursuit to join a
      
      
        major league baseball club — to
      
      
        teach and coach at the highest
      
      
        possible level… or at least knock
      
      
        on a few doors.
      
      
        It was eight years ago when
      
      
        I wanted to be the most knowl-
      
      
        edgeable expert on the baseball
      
      
        swing. I wanted to teach swing
      
      
        mechanics at an elite level. I had
      
      
        coached high school and college
      
      
        baseball in the 1990s but I didn’t
      
      
        consider myself an expert at
      
      
        teaching hitting. I knew there was
      
      
        more to be learned.
      
      
        I began to read books and
      
      
        study video of the best hitters in
      
      
        major league baseball. I talked to
      
      
        swing geeks on forums. I gave
      
      
        hundreds of lessons to kids of
      
      
        all ages. I filmed minor league
      
      
        hitters and studied their flaws.
      
      
        I even became acquainted with
      
      
        Tampa Bay Rays player Ben
      
      
        Zobrist. I worked several baseball
      
      
        camps with Ben and learned that
      
      
        his swing mechanics at one time
      
      
        weren’t good enough for the
      
      
        major leagues.
      
      
        Only by a fortunate run-in at
      
      
        a local batting cage with a swing
      
      
        coach (he says similar to me) did
      
      
        he realize he had swing flaws.
      
      
        When he fixed these flaws, he
      
      
        went from a journeyman big
      
      
        leaguer to being selected to the
      
      
        2009
      
      
        American League All-Star
      
      
        team.
      
      
        Ben told me swing mechan-
      
      
        ics instruction in professional
      
      
        baseball was scarce. He said the
      
      
        coaches were good hitters in
      
      
        their day and they did a good job
      
      
        teaching the big picture of hitting
      
      
        (
      
      
        approach, pitch selection, mental
      
      
        aspect, etc.) but not mechanics.
      
      
        After all, no pro coach noticed
      
      
        his swing flaw until his chance
      
      
        meeting with the guy at the bat-
      
      
        ting cage.
      
      
        As Ben and I continued to
      
      
        work and teach together, he told
      
      
        me that my knowledge of swing
      
      
        mechanics was good enough to
      
      
        help a major leaguer. I asked him
      
      
        if he thought I could break into
      
      
        to the professional ranks. He told
      
      
        me that because I never played
      
      
        professional baseball it would be
      
      
        difficult to get anyone to listen to
      
      
        me. He encouraged me to knock
      
      
        on doors, but it was a closed club.
      
      
        I began to wonder how many
      
      
        other Ben Zobrists were out
      
      
        there — guys with potential, yet
      
      
        a swing flaw was holding them
      
      
        back. Last summer I began to
      
      
        video local minor leaguers and
      
      
        noticed some of them had signifi-
      
      
        cant swing flaws that I felt would
      
      
        hold them back. I printed out
      
      
        an analysis comparison of their
      
      
        swings against major leaguer
      
      
        swings and tried to meet them
      
      
        before or after their games. A few
      
      
        talked to me. None of them fol-
      
      
        lowed up with me.
      
      
        In May, I decided to take a
      
      
        trip to the Cubs AAA park in
      
      
        Des Moines, Iowa to do some
      
      
        Personal Profile
      
      
        Los Angelas Dodgers minor league hitting coordinator, Eric Owens teaches in front of the Pro-ball campers