sales@hittingworld.com
sales@hittingworld.com
Use Colored Dots to Improve Batter Recognition
Olan Suddeth
One of the biggest challenges encountered by youth baseball coaches is
the difficulty that players have in following and identifying the
pitch. In younger players, a common problem is that the batter doesn't
pick up the ball until it is too close to hit. In older players, the
issue is more that the batter doesn't identify the pitch until too
late, leaving him at the mercy of his pitch guess.
The solution to both of these issues has a similar fix - get the hitter concentrating on the pitch as early as possible.
But how to accomplish this? You can tell the player to "watch the ball" until you are blue in the face, but odds are that they won't connect what you are trying to convey.
Take a selection of baseballs and, using a marker (colored sharpies work great for this), draw coin-sized colored dots on the surface of the ball. Repeat the process with at least one alternate color, making sure that it is clearly distinguishable (red and blue work well for this).
To begin with, pitch to your batter from reglation distance, but instruct them to not swing. Instead, have them call out the color of the dot on the baseball as soon as they can identify it.
As the hitter's recognition improves, call out a certain color and only allow them to swing at that color ball. In all cases, make sure to mix up the colors used (this is why three colors are better than two), and hide the ball in your glove until you actually begin to make the pitch.
Olan Suddeth runs the website www.YouthBaseballInfo.com - a free resource committed to helping you quickly find useful information on drills, practice organization, game strategy, baseball fundamentals, and other subjects of interest to the youth baseball coach, parent, or fan.