| extending too much and hitting the
outside pitch. They can also jam hitters in key situations, getting weak
ground outs or pop flies. Pitchers can also take advantage by
intimidating hitters, making their curve balls more effective. Eliminate
all of these advantages, as well as teach hitters to protect themselves
from an inside pitch. Protection is the first concern. As the pitch is
delivered, the batter shifts his weight back and draws his hands back.
If it is a pitch he can hit, he is ready to swing. If the pitch is going
to hit him, he is halfway to protecting himself. Teach the hitter to
turn his back to the ball. It is a natural move because the hitter
should be following the ball into the plate anyway. This method protects
the face since the back of the helmet extends down to protect the neck,
so a high and tight fastball will hit the hitter in the helmet. Anything
lower than the head will strike an area that is generally well protected
by muscle. In addition, by lowering the bat and drawing it back, the
hitter cannot accidentally hit the ball foul for a strike, or worse,
fair--for an easy out. Curve balls become easier to hit because batters
hang in longer, realizing that the curve is a slower pitch and will not
hurt them if they are hit. The batter hangs in longer, giving himself a
better chance of hitting it.
The first week of practice when the varsity and junior varsity work
together may facilitate everyone understanding this procedure. Use
Incredi-Balls, tennis balls or plastic wiffle balls. Pitches are
thrown inside and the batter reacts. Pitches are also thrown for
strikes to make sure batters are not thinking about getting hit by a
pitch and are actually getting ready to hit the ball.
The action needed to turn away from an inside pitch is a natural
one--the same motion batters use to cock back when a pitch is
delivered. In other words, they are ready to hit, and being ready is
important for power hitters who have the confidence to wait and hit
the inside pitch over the fence.
While using this routine sounds dangerous, no injuries have occurred
in four years. Last season in the 41 times that batters were hit,
there were no injuries. Actually, it is safer because the longer a
hitter sees the pitch, the better his chance of hitting it. Hitters no
longer feel they have to bail out from an inside pitch, especially a
curve ball. If the curve ball does not break, hitters get hit in a
well-protected part of the body by a soft pitch and get a free base.
By staying in, the hitter can take away the inside pitch and
intimidate the pitcher.
Our players did just that in the playoffs a couple of years ago. The
team was down by a couple of runs, but the other team's pitcher was
not able to consistently throw inside strikes and began hitting
batters. The pitcher stopped throwing inside because all he was doing
was putting runners on base and giving him something else to worry
about. In other words, he only had halt-a-plate to work with. He began
to miss with his pitches. Those he did get over the plate were right
down the middle, and our hitters began to tee off and we won the game.
Teaching batters to protect themselves frustrates a pitcher, because
there is no way he can control the inside part of the plate;
therefore, batters either get a free base or a pitch to drive. Batters
hit with confidence because they know they cannot be hurt by a pitch.
Players can take advantage of these little edges.The most versatile
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