I was mostly going off of what KB said his motivation was last year for flattening his path a little. Uppercuts are great. But they can be too extreme. I feel like that is what is happening with Kyle at times. KB specifically said that if his bat angle is too steep then it won't stay in the zone long and his margin for error is reduced. I should have been more clear with what I meant. Bryant flattened out his bat angle by 2-3 degrees to help cover the outside corner. Unless you have data on Schwarber's bat angle through the zone, that's a blind criticism. He's not getting beat because his bat angle is too extreme, he's getting beat because he's guessing on every pitch right now. I can't say if that's something that can get straightened out in Iowa or not, but I think I'd rather he work with big league coaching and fight through this mental horsefeathers he's dealing with at the plate. Schwarber's descent has had stages. It wasn't always this blind panic hacking that it's been lately. It started when his exit velocity dropped off a cliff and gradually it became this mental mess. But his exit velocity loss is when I first started to feel like something must be off mechanically. It's not just the whiffs but also the exorbitant amount of pop flies. He has not been getting "through the ball", as they say, from what I see. A basic tenet of Williams' teachings is that the bat head should stay on the same plane as the pitch so as to create a larger impact zone. Just feels like Kyle has struggled to maintain that. Despite his struggles and that I have said I don't think a demotion would be the worst thing in the world for him at this point, I still haven't been nearly as critical of him as many others have. I'm confident that he can get straightened out. But the longer slumps linger, the more the mind cracks. It's a very delicate situation and sometimes simply getting that mental break can be helpful.