According to Joe Christensen, Danny Valencia has been working hard all offseason at improving his overall game. In addition to trying to repair his shoddy defense, he has used video to help him make a few changes to his offensive approach:
Here's a look at what Valencia has seen:
Focus on his hands. Notice that during his loading process, he drops his hands while bring the bat inside then brings his hands back up to his launch position. This action is what causes the "longer loop" as Christensen describes it.
Compare Valencia's loading process to that of fellow right-hander and former teammate Michael Cuddyer:
Rather than moving his hands towards his body, Cuddyer simply shifts his set back to the launch position, maintaining the same linear plane and creating the "straighter path to the ball."
From the side view, this will better highlight Valencia's subtle hitch in comparison to how level someone like Cuddyer keeps his hands:
What is interesting about this is that throughout his career, Valencia has had this hitch in his swing – at least it was a trait he featured dating back to at least 2008 in the Arizona Fall League. It is clear that he has a hitch but this approach worked well for him during his time in AA (.287/.353/.483 in 539 plate appearances), AAA (.289/.322/.421 in 484 plate appearances) and at the major league level last year (.311/.351/.448 in 322 plate appearances). Of course, when you come off a season like Valencia did in 2011, obviously the performance demands some answers.
Did his hitch derail his season? Were big league pitchers better at exploiting this than their minor league counterparts?