Tags
Baseball, braves, cardinals, infield, infield fly, infield fly rule, Instruction, MLB, paralacalle, umpire
09 Tuesday Oct 2012
Posted sports
in07 Tuesday Aug 2012
Posted Uncategorized
inTags
balance, Baseball, giants, hitter, hitting zone, Instruction, mechanics, paralacalle, posey
Talking to one of my students and the need to gather to “get something going”… this video shows how Posey gathers, stays balanced, and takes his weight transfer through the zone…
05 Sunday Aug 2012
Posted Uncategorized
inTags
angles, Baseball, brewers, homerune, idaho falls chukars, MILB, paralacalle
Stumbled upon this write of a game with the Chukars!
23 Monday Jul 2012
Posted Uncategorized
inJust got word that the Lamorinda Spartans went 4-0 this past weekend in the 12U TPR July Classic. Proud of you boys!
Let’s get after it in practice this week.
The official roster is set for the 10U Knights — looking forward to working with the smaller group. Timing is everything. This week it’s discipline, keeping the double play in order, and communication. Control what you can. Hustle 1st!
Check them out on https://www.facebook.com/Lamorindabaseball and http://lamorindabaseball.org/
22 Tuesday May 2012
Posted Uncategorized
inTags
AAU, all star, all stars, babe ruth, Baseball, Little League, Scout, showcase, travel ball
2 more weeks of school left and I can’t wait for summer! If you couldn’t tell from my earlier posts, I’m a fan of sunshine and baseball, what could be better?
I just missed the travel ball era. Growing up in the 90’s and playing my most competitive ball in the past decade, the business of paying to play missed my peer group. Besides the elite showcases such as Area Codes, or the Arizona showcase in Peoria (Mariner/Padres complex) and things like Team USA, there wasn’t a huge push to play beyond your all-star teams. With talent spread thin and the level of competition differing league to league and within it, team to team, families and players are finding themselves having to seek out a competitive environment.
I’ll leave this as is right now…I’d love to hear from others about their experiences with the “pay to play” era.
02 Monday Apr 2012
Posted sports, Uncategorized
inTags
Baseball, Batted ball, Equipment, Fundamentals, Gym, Instruction, Little League, Rain, Shopping, Sport, Weight training
While rain and baseball never go hand in hand – there actually are some benefits to the wintery, wet conditions. When it rains, unless you play in a dome, baseball, specifically in the Bay Area, comes to a stop….or does it?
Now that the role is reversed and I’m no longer the player yearning for extra BP (batting practice) or on the field ground balls, I understand the importance of gym days. It forces us coaches to push a pause on the fast life of the season and gives time to the important components of the game that can go untaught or better neglected…
Some quick and easy things to remember of those rainy gym days:
-Get your players in the weight room (They don’t need to pump large amounts. Let’s encourage them to use lower weight and higher reps – encouraging a good warm up routine with stretch bands, abdominal work to accompany them during the season).
-Great time to go over signs and defensive schemes (bunt D, pick offs)
-Don’t be afraid to go back to the fundamentals with everything emphasizing foot work and proper approach to fielding ground balls & fly balls.
Remember – small work is just as important as live BP and game situations…enhance what you say in the gym out on the field.
Happy April!
–
31 Tuesday Jan 2012
Tags
Baseball, Boston Red Sox, David Ortiz, Major League Baseball, Major League Baseball Most Valuable Player Award, New York Yankees, Ortiz, Sports
Click on the link above to check on the concept of getting the back side through the zone. Notice that many of the hitters are actually using their lower half to torque the rest of the body (hands) through…this keeps our motion on a linear path towards the baseball.
Yes, many of these hitters are power hitters, hence, the homework derby – however – guys like Cano and Ortiz are actually good hitters as well.
08 Thursday Dec 2011
Posted Uncategorized
inTags
Baseball, Baseball Writers Association of America, Bees, Burlington, Clayton, Clayton Kershaw, Cy Young, Cy Young Award, Dickerson, Home, Jase, Joe, Kershaw, Loons, Los Angeles Dodgers, Midwestleague, MILB, MLB, National League, Roy Halladay, Steal, Turner
http://www.thehawkeye.com/print/Bees_Loons_5_25
Copy and paste the link above – a cool article I found today. Runner on 3rd – me at the plate – he steals home on Clayton Kershaw (NL Cy Young). I actually got a single to left off him. He was no joke!
08 Tuesday Nov 2011
Posted Uncategorized
inTags
Baseball, chukars, hands up, idaho falls, orem, orem owls, ryan mount, safe, sliding, utah
03 Thursday Nov 2011
Posted sports
inI co-run baseball fall ball clinics for local high schools. It lasts for about a 12 wks and the purpose is to receive baseball instruction and repitition during the off-season. The players have games on the weekends and spend 3 days during the week working with us.
Yesterday the agenda was at 6-7pm (optional defensive work) and at 7-8pm (optional hitting)…Tuesdays and Thursdays are the preferred days that all players come. Getting to my story – yesterday for optional fielding only one students showed up. I was fairly surprised – these kids need work! I was happy that the one player was actually a first baseman – freshman, large frame but very “raw.” Who knows where he’ll end up in 4 years but as of now, he’s truly a freshman (a big freshman).
Yesterday we worked on footwork while turning two – playing behind the runner. Many young players make all infield play two fold – first they field the ball flat footed then make a jump turn to exchange and throw. At this point there has to be a transition where they are making this play in one motion…speeding up their side of it giving the middle infielder a chance to make a play. The key for young first baseman is the round the ball and plant your left foot slightly in from of the right as you are fielding so that your body is in position to make that turn and throw (with momentum towards your target)…His ability to mimick increased – I think it says something about his ethic that he put in the work. I asked him about his classes and grades…he has a 4.0 and is taking Algebra Trig already — I think he’s got the right mind frame. Whether or not that transitions to success in baseball, his work ethic is off to a good start.
Oh Yeah….at 7pm — 11 players showed up to hit. If you can’t play in the field – you won’t be hitting. High school DH’s don’t last long.