Driveline Baseball Interview, Part 3: How MLB Can Redefine Weight Lifting

AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND - MAY 30: Kieran Read of the All Blacks squats during a gym session at Les Mills on May 30, 2016 in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)
AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND - MAY 30: Kieran Read of the All Blacks squats during a gym session at Les Mills on May 30, 2016 in Auckland, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images) /
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Weight Room Work

Benjamin Chase, Call to the Pen: How does the weight room, sprint work, agility work, plyometric work, and other indirect training with a pitcher differ from the same work with a non-pitcher (and if age of athlete matters)? (Writer’s note: while the question was about pitching, you’ll see that the discussion is in general on lifting and other training work.)

Michael O’Connell, Driveline Baseball: The weight room is a large part of our program. Our High Performance Trainers, Kyle Rogers, Sam Briend and Jack Scheideman, do a great job. They handle all the athlete screening and retesting plus they are excellent at balancing an athlete’s weight room workload with their throwing workload, something often overlooked. (We’ve talked about this concept, balancing an athlete’s training economy here.)

Everything we do in the weight room revolves around the screening. If they need to get stronger we can put them on a weight room specific and low volume (no high intent) throwing program. Getting stronger and producing more force is going to be beneficial not just for velocity development but also for fatigue resistance. We encourage athletes to lift stronger and if they meet our strength requirements then we encourage them to lift weight faster using velocity based training.

​Our screening is done in two parts, a movement screen and a performance screen. The movement screen gives us an idea of an athlete’s movement quality while the performance screen gives us an idea of an athlete’s strength.

More from Call to the Pen

​(If you’d like to see more about what we do we discuss those further on our blog: movement screen & performance screen.)

We don’t do much specific sprint, agility, plyometric work. Most of that is covered with weight lifting: The stronger you are, the more force you can produce, the faster, quicker, etc. you should be.

Regardless of age we want athletes to cover the basic movement pattern squat, hinge, push, pull. So that really means that a youth athlete may goblet squat, a high school/college athlete will front/back squat, and a professional athlete will squat for speed using VBT.

There isn’t a huge difference between working with pitchers and hitters. Occasionally we’ll need to make some adjustments to pitcher’s programs based on throwing volume. So the only difference is pitchers usually need more adjustments.

Next: Mike Trout reaches milestone on his birthday

Thoughts:

These images of Bryce Harper went viral on Twitter a few years ago originally. As a power lifter, I scoffed at the amazement at the raw weight numbers as most college freshman running backs can clear a 500-pound deadlift.

However, the first link that Michael provided includes an important mention that this is still a “new” idea in the world of baseball. One has to remember that the Oakland Athletics became the first team to have a full-time strength coach in the 1990s. Every other major sport had a majority of its teams with full-time strength workers by that point, but baseball has always been that far behind.

Part of the increase in the home runs in the 1990s/early 2000s can be attributed to teams finally all getting a full-time strength coach. Many want to have it easy and point to just one reason, but better strength training is one of many reasons that we examined in January on Call to the Pen. That may be an article to re-hash on a yearly basis as players are denied with their numbers all assumed to be distorted for one reason. Like the current increase in home runs, there is always more than just one reason!

We’ll be back with more this week!