Young kids in my area are taught to "break down" get feet shoulder width apart, get tip of glove on ground and "alligator" the ground ball. Then throw to base or maybe shuffle and throw to base.
As my son starts playing with 9 and 10 year olds, I've noticed that they are more fluid when fielding grounders (unless they are hard shots to them). They seem to move forward, and then move forward or through the ball while gloving it, and then keep their momentum towards the base when throwing to the base. In contrast, the younger one's stop (aka break down), feet apart, get ball, then from a stand still throw or shuffle throw.
I'm wondering how do you teach fielding through the ball so your momentum is moving to where you want to throw the ball and you don't stop and then get upright to throw? Are you supposed to step with a particular foot (R or L) as you field the ball? Is there a video or website where I can read the teach on this?
As my son starts playing with 9 and 10 year olds, I've noticed that they are more fluid when fielding grounders (unless they are hard shots to them). They seem to move forward, and then move forward or through the ball while gloving it, and then keep their momentum towards the base when throwing to the base. In contrast, the younger one's stop (aka break down), feet apart, get ball, then from a stand still throw or shuffle throw.
I'm wondering how do you teach fielding through the ball so your momentum is moving to where you want to throw the ball and you don't stop and then get upright to throw? Are you supposed to step with a particular foot (R or L) as you field the ball? Is there a video or website where I can read the teach on this?
Comment