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The fact is, though, that the lesson the Beer Ge has to offer is not more elegantly presented by Gary Pettis, describing going back to catch a ball hit over your head.
MBB: You were exceptionally good at breaking back on a ball, taking your eyes off it completely, and then finding it on the other end
(GP): Well, I’m not sure I was so special…
MBB: …I can get to the vicinity – I know pretty much where it’s going to land and I’m there, but I can’t see it again. is not there some technique you used? Or is not it something you’re born with?short scale bass string
nylon string acoustic electric guitar
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(GP): You see the trajectory the ball was hit on. And over the years you get to know the angle it’s going to come out, greater height means less distance. You get to know where they are.
And also, you practice during batting practice and spring training. That’s one of the drills you do. Someone hits a ball and you try to run to the spot. By knowing the angle it ce off the bat, you have an idea.
Take playing in the Metrodome in Minnesota. If you happen to lose the ball in the ceiling there (which a lot of people do), the mistake is not to look where you last saw it.
It’s never going to been there. If you lose it you have to stay on the line of where the ball was going when you last saw it…you have a chance of finding it.
MBB: It’s a physics problem.
(GP): and if you look for it where it was before, you’re never going to find it.
MBB: So let’s talk about stealing home runs. If there was a record for Stealing Home Runs, turning balls that were going to over the fence into outs, you’d have the record, in my lifetime anyway. I saw six or seven either at a ge on t.v.