After Cheo and I could catch the ball almost every time, he taught us how to stand in the batter’s box. Get balanced. Feet apart, knees bent nice and light. Lift your hands. Be ready to hit. See the ball, hit the ball. See it, hit it! C’mon!
We were ready to swing for the fences, the way we’d seen Pai and the other men do. No, he said. You learn first how to bunt.
He showed us how to hold the bat so the pitch wouldn’t hit our fingers. Here’s how you drop the bat to meet the ball.
Finally we got to swing.
Eyes on the ball. Let the ball come to you. Wait for it. See it. Then hit it hard somewhere. As hard as you can. Keep your hands on the bat. Keep your body straight, straight, straight. Okay, you’re turning away from the ball. A lot of players make that mistake.
One. Skill. At. A. Time.
You won’t see this hitting training progression on YouTube. Teaching bunting before hitting?
Never that. But Senor Molina was up to something special.
Bengie Molina and Joan Ryan, Molina: The Story of the Father Who Raised an Unlikely Baseball Dynasty (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2015). pg 21