|
Glove Extension
Proper fielding calls for the glove to be extended out in front of the player. Younger
players often hold the glove directly below them when awaiting a ground ball. This
drill helps promote the required glove extension.
-
Lay a bat on the ground perpendicular to a line of 4-5 players.
-
The first player in line is 6 feet from the bat in a ready position.
-
The coach is 10 feet from the players.
-
The coach calls 'ready' and rolls a ball toward the bat.
-
The first player in line runs up and gets in a proper fielding position directly
behind the bat without touching it.
To prevent the ball from rolling into the bat, the player must have his
glove extended in front of the bat toward the coach.
-
When the player fields the ball, he sprints to the coach and places it at the feet of the coach and takes his place at the end of the line.
Lateral Movement
Use this drill to improve lateral movement for handling ground balls and line drives.
The drill station group competes to see who can keep the most balls from hitting a fence
behind them.
-
Find a fence about 20 feet wide and 6 feet high.
-
One at a time, fielders stand in front of the fence while a batter stands about 40 feet away.
The batter can be a coach or other player.
-
The batter hits 10 balls to different spots within the fence area (grounders, line drives).
-
The fielder must stop the balls from hitting the fence.
-
Each fielder is hit 10 balls and the fielder who stops the most wins.
Quick Throws
A great fielding drill is to time players
fielding a ground ball and throwing to first base. Have the players
start at a specified position on the infield (a good spot is the edge
of
the outfield grass or near shortstop position) The coach is
positioned near the pitcher's mound and rolls a ball directly at the
fielder. The fielder charges the ball, fields it and throws to first
base. As the coach releases the ball, he starts a stopwatch. The
coach stops the stopwatch when the throw is caught by the first baseman.
There is no time announced if the first baseman can't catch the ball. It is very
obvious that not charging, fielding the ball in front, using alligator
hands, etc. add a lot of time. The players will compete with each
other, but they will also compete against themselves to get a better
time. The ball is rolled, so it is easy to field, and players that are
not the best fielders are usually not discouraged.
|