TeeBall Parent Guide Blog

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Showing posts with label youth baseball drills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label youth baseball drills. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Little League Baseball Coaching

Little League Baseball Coaching
By guest author: Joe Brockhoff

If we hold our hands up and pop our wrists, we can do that over and over again very quickly. If someone were to throw a punch at us, our hands would quickly and automatically pop up in defense.

As an infielder, we don't have to think about a ball thrown to us. Our hands will react to the direction of the ball and make the catch without having to think about it.

Think of the catcher after he gives the sign. He is taught to frame the pitch. His hands automatically go to the pitch without any thought or direction.

So the hands are auto reactors. Is this good for the hitter? The answer is: No! The hitter who allows his hands to react automatically as his first movement towards the pitch will never have full body support.

When the hands go too early, this is when we hear the coach yell out, "Wait on the pitch!"
Now, let's apply this to our baseball hitting mechanics.

These are the steps:

1. Coil (Load): The hitter collects his weight on the backside
2. Stride: a linear step towards the pitched ball (30-40% of weight transfer)
3. Body Rotation: Hips rotate toward the ball
4. Hands will then, and only then, execute the stroke

Here is one of our best little league baseball coaching tips: "HIPS TAKE US TO THE BALL. HANDS TAKE US THROUGH THE BALL."

So, when we are leaning how to hit a baseball, do we trust the hands? The answer is:

Don't trust the hands. Then, trust the hands. In other words, discipline the hands to wait until we get into the launch position, which is with the hands inside the ball and the hips rotated.

Our hands do not initiate the stroke until we rotate to the pitch. They travel in rotation with the pivot, but they do not commit to the pitch until the rotation is complete. This rotated position with the hands still back is what we call the DRIVE position. It is at this time that the hands will launch.

NOW we can trust them. Let them explode the bat to the ball.

One final note. Remember that when we hit, the hands are in a double lever system. That is, they don't personally go to the ball. They are holding the bat, which goes to the ball. The hands always end up in front of the body. They are responsible for directing the bat to the proper cut line on the pitch.

Former Tulane Hall of Fame Baseball Coach, Joe Brockhoff, fully explains his baseball hitting drills with the Super 8 Hitting System, completely demonstrated with videos and hitting drills to help you hit with more power and raise your batting average. http://www.kewego.com/video/iLyROoafMM8J.html.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Joe_Brockhoff

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Thursday, July 21, 2011

T-Ball University Batting Grip & Hand Position www.tballu.com



T-Ball University Batting Grip & Hand Position www.tballu.com
Uploaded by TBALLUNIVERSITY This mini lesson (www.tballu.com) will instruct coaches and parents on proper batting grip and hand position for Tee-Ball age children. Additional lessons and downloadable drill sheets, practice plans and coaching forms are available at www.tballu.com.

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Monday, August 2, 2010

How to Play Kids' Sports Safely

How to Play Youth Sports Safely
By Guest Author John Myre

Most kids are going to play organized sports, but they aren't always aware of the potential for injury. Accept that fact. However, that doesn't mean adults can't be involved in making play as safe as possible for our enthusiastic young athletes. Here are some tips to help make games fun and painless.

A Set Of Helpful Standards

The National Alliance For Youth Sports has developed the following standards for parents in developing and administering youth sports for children. Involved parents should:

* Consider and carefully choose the proper environment for their child, including the appropriate age and development for participation, the type of sport, the rules in the sport, the age range of the participants, and the proper level of physical and emotional stress.

* Select youth programs that are developed and organized to enhance the emotional, physical, social and educational well-being of children.

* Encourage a drug, tobacco and alcohol-free environment.

* Recognize that youth sports are only a small part of a child's life.

* Insist that coaches be trained and certified.

* Make a serious effort to take an active role in the youth sports experience of their child.

* Be a positive role model exhibiting sportsmanlike behavior at games, practices, and home, and give positive reinforcement to their child and support to the coaches.

* Demonstrate a commitment to their child's youth sports experience by annually signing a parental code of ethics.

Keeping Sports Fun
* If you decide to let your child play on a "Select" team, recognize that your child may face additional pressures, and you may need to take steps to keep sports at that level in perspective.

* While virtually all coaches want to make sports an enjoyable activity for kids, there are a few coaches who will use their position to exploit children. Following are questions for parents suggested by the Florida branch of the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children:

1. Does the organization do a background check on coaches?

2. What is the coach's philosophy about winning and sportsmanship?

3. Are there other adults who supervise off-site travel?

4. Do children use a locker room to dress, and are there multiple adults present in the locker room when children are using it?

5. Do you as a parent have input into the sporting activity?

6. Does the coach promise to make your child a champion player, or want to spend time alone with your child outside of scheduled activities?

7. Do you as a parent talk to your child about how he or she likes the coach or the sport?

Where Does It Hurt?

In every sport there is a risk of injury. To reduce the risk:

* Take your child for a complete physical exam before taking part in any sport. Some children have serious physical conditions that can be aggravated by exertion.

* Become educated on the possible injuries that can occur in the sport. Talk with a sports medicine doctor or trainer to develop a fitness plan, and to get guidelines on preventing overuse injuries.

* Begin conditioning exercises before the season begins.

* Make sure your child has good equipment that fits well.

* Use eye guards and mouth guards for high-risk sports.

* Don't ignore pain. If a child says something hurts, see a sports medicine doctor.

* Buy a book on sports medicine and keep it handy. It will help you treat minor injuries at home. It will also help you oversee your child's general physical condition.

* Insist on safe playing facilities, healthful playing situations, and proper first aid applications.

* Know the answer to these questions: Where is the nearest hospital? How would I get there in an emergency? Who can I call for immediate attention if my child is injured?

* A trainer, parent or coach trained in CPR, and access to a telephone, should be available near the playing field.

* Children are especially vulnerable to overuse injuries because of the softness of their growing bones and the relative tightness of their ligaments and tendons during growth spurts. One way to avoid overuse injuries is to never increase intensity, duration, frequency or distance by more than 10 percent a week.

* Watch the weather. Heat illness can occur when it's hotter than 85 degrees with a humidity of 70 percent or more.

* Make sure your child drinks enough water during a sporting contest. If a child asks for water, give it to him or her. Their body is sending an important signal.

John Myre is the author of the award-winning book, Live Safely in a Dangerous World, and the publisher of the Safety Times Reproducible Articles.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=John_Myre

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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Youth Baseball Drills: Throw with Crow Hop

Youth Baseball Drills: Throw with Crow Hop

PlaySportsTV http://www.playsportstv.com/trainingp... presents former major leaguer and current Princeton Univ. head coach Scott Bradley with a great youth baseball fielding and throwing drill. For over 80 more baseball drills and tips, developed specifically for 5- to 12-year-old players, visit PlaySportsTV.com.



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