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Coaching Tee Ball |
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TEE BALL TIPS |
12. Remember that players will not perform effectively in
games unless they have practiced that way. If you don't practice base running,
you will get base running outs in games. If you don't drill the players on
catching the ball and making a good, smart throw, they won't do it in the game.
Attention to the basics is essential.
13. To make the most of your practice time, break the team up into two or three
groups, depending on the number of coaches, space, and
equipment you have available for the workout. This will enable you to
accomplish two or three times as much work without making players stand around
with nothing to do.
14. Proper dugout behavior is essential to good order on the ballfield during the game. As with all other elements of
the practice, if you don't achieve it in practice, you won't achieve it in the
game. A dugout full of monkeys is very distracting to the team and the coaches.
It also sets the tone for what will happen between the baselines.
15. As you're working with your tee ball players, try to avoid letting hitters
stand nearly motionless in one position in the batter's box too long. When a
hitter stands in one place too long, he tends to settle vertically in his
stance while he's waiting to swing. This makes it difficult for him to transfer
this momentum horizontally into his hitting motion.
16. Whatever the coach does with foot positioning during the hitting sequence,
he must ensure the hitter maintains control over his power and balance and can
reach the ball with the "sweet" part of the bat. As the stride is
begun with the batter's weight and head back over the back foot and weight on
the balls of the feet, the hitter transfers his weight in the swing with the
head kept back behind the point of contact with the ball. There's a bit more to
hitting than that, but the preceding two sentences should makethe
point that you should pay close attention to where and how your hitter stands
in the batter's box. Many coaches simply let their hitters approach the tee and
start flailing away at the ball.
17. If you've spent any time around tee ball at all, you've seen coaches who
framed their entire offensive strategy around a scheme to have hitters
challenge the outfield's ability to catch the ball by hitting pop flies.
However, when the level of competition elevates or when players get older,
those deep fly balls turn into disappointing outs. My teams scored a lot of
runs just by hitting hard grounders and crisp line drives through holes inthe defense. Yes, tee ball players can place-hit, if
shown how.
18. Teach your players to slide. It makes the game safer, it can help them
avoid a high tag, and it keeps them on the base when you don't want them to
wander off of it.
19. The hitter's bat should be the heaviest bat he can handle in a
fundamentally sound swing. The heavier bat gives the ball more punch as long as
the hitter can effectively get it to the ball. However, the heaviest bat in the
bag is no good in the hands of the player who can't effectively deliver it to
the ball.
20. One of the most common, yet subtle hazards to players involves the handling
of bats by players waiting to bat. It was our team policy that players didn't
handle a bat unless a coach handed it to him. Once a coach handed a player a
bat, he maintained him in his supervision.
21. The most common mistake parents make when they're
teaching their kids to catch pop flies is that they don't make sure they get to
the ball before they try to catch it. Teach kids to catch pop flies in two
steps: run and center up under the ball, then put your glove up and catch the
ball. Of course, there are times when the player can't center up, but you need
to start with the easy fly first.
22. I had an indoor-safe ball that he threw to my kids in their family room
where they could get comfortable catching flies, grounders, and the really
tough ones. They soon graduated to the really tough diving plays then they
threw from the knees. This exercise was good for developing their confidence
around the ball and gave us the needed repetitions it took to help them become
fluid in the fielding-throwing sequence.