Tee Ball Tips - More Tee Ball Tips
Tee Ball
Faq
Q: Although my child is still tee ball age, I think
she's ready to step up an age group and play pitch ball with the older kids.
What do you think?
A: Why hurry? Your daughter's probably only 6 or 7 and has plenty of softball
ahead of her. Let's remember that only part of the reason you had your daughter
play tee ball was to give her a sport to play. The other part of the reason you
had her play tee ball was to expose her to the game of softball in a way that
had her focusing on the basic elements of what is arguably the most difficult
skill to master in baseball and softball: hitting. Remember that professional
baseball players were hitting baseballs off of tees long before the first tee
ball team was formed to improve their swings. The tee and the game of tee ball
are first and foremost instruments to aid in player development. The game of tee
ball develops good habits and some degree of muscle memory in players before
pressure and the relative absence of maturity force them into bad habits while
doing whatever it takes to put the bat on a pitched ball, whether that ball has
been pitched by a machine, a coach, or by another player. I'd leave her in tee
ball with her peers.
Q: I'm having a lot of problems getting my players to pay attention to me.
HELP!
A: Some kids don't pay attention to
anyone, particularly at tee ball age, so let's not assume you're failing them.
With that said, coaches are famous for being part of that culture that can reach
children when no one else can, so let's look at the best way to equip yourself
to get through to them. A former schoolteacher once told me that his trick for
keeping discipline in the classroom was to never smile before Christmas.
Although probably a bit of an overstatement, his point is well-taken in that
authority figures don't gain discipline by trying to demonstrate what good guys
they are. The players need to be in your camp and prove things to you. You need
to build that camp and make sure that when they prove they're part of your
program that you'll nurture, support, train, encourage, and kid around with
them.
Discipline begins with habit and repetition. Make a habit of practice and game
routines that reinforce the fact that you're on the field to play softball. I
always told my players that softball is a great game and that they needed to
show it respect when they step inside of the chain link area of the playing
field by not playing around. We did not allow them to stir around in the dirt,
chase butterflies, or play with their caps. While some think it's cute for them
to do this, it also defeats the point of having them learn a team sport where
the rest of the team is counting on them to do their part. I spent a lot of time
talking to them about softball and tried to develop in them a sense of
gamesmanship. It worked pretty well. The older kids were the first to catch on,
then I asked them to show some leadership. Believe it or not, those 6 and 7 year
olds towed the line and brought the 4 and 5 year olds along with them. They all
worked very hard and had a great time. Most of those kids are still playing
softball, and that tee ball team, five or six generations of players removed, is
still doing well. Habit and repetition requires a lot of patience and
persistence from you.
Tee Ball Tips. These rules are intended for both
boys and girls in baseball and softball tee ball.
TEE BALL TIPS
1. Unfortunately, a late start in a game like tee
ball or baseball typically means players won't make up the difference until the
following season whenhe can get a better start. Get organized, develop a plan,
and prepare to work hard. Learn as much about tee ball and baseball as you can.
Prepare to learn enough about baseball to be able to present the material in
"kid terms."
2. Kids don't know what it means to "step in the bucket" or "take an extra base"
or "turn two" until you teach them and show them. Successful coaches know their
audience and use analogies and common visual imagery to establish an
intellectual and cognitive connection with their players. For tee ball players,
these images are best when they are a bit dramatic: point the belly button
toward the part of the field where you want to hit the ball (get your hips
rotated), make your arm like an elephant's trunk when throwing (don't launch the
ball like a catapult, THROW it), and point the button on your cap in the
direction the ball came from when fielding a ground ball (keep your head down),
for instance.
3. Whether your league keeps score or not, or whether you have a team that can
win games or not, don't ever fail to take your responsibilities as a coach
seriously. Being a serious coach means that you'll try to teach them something
about baseball, basic skills, and sportsmanship, it means that you're attentive
to player safety, and it means that while you're asking your players to put
their best foot forward, so are you.
4. Having been a good player is no assurance that you will be a good coach any
more than being a good student necessarily means you will be a good teacher. A
coach must possess certain qualities – many coaches are satisfied with merely
having characteristics. A coach has to be a good teacher, he has to be patient,
he has to be confident and decisive, he has to be nurturing when his players get
hurt or make mistakes, and he has to be able to get as much as he can out of his
players without going too far.
5. Tell players' parents not to assume that the game of tee ball is just like
the game of baseball; try to tell them the difference because it might spare you
an untimely laugh and them the humiliation of asking a silly question later.
6. The most difficult thing a coach has to do is see the twelve players on the
field who are not related to him. If you can do it, try to be a coachon the
field and a parent off the field, and get your fellow coaches to do the same.
Impartiality (and avoiding excessive impartiality) is essential to success.
7. Coaches need the assistance of their players' parents. I found that parents
are normally willing to help out if they aren't too busy and they tend to learn
that the more they participate in the operation of the team, the more they also
stay in touch with the challenges coaches encounter as they try to build the
team. (Getting parents' assistance does not mean losing controlof the team to
them.)
8. There can be three hundred people in the stands and three coaches shouting
during a game, but the one voice a player hears is his own mother's. This isn't
a problem until the coach tells the player to stop and she yells forhim to go.
The only thing a coach can do about this is tell the parents how tough it is to
communicate with the players when there are conflicting instructions on the
field. At times, it can be a safety issue.
9. Parents bring their own expectations into the season and it's safe to assume
that coaches and managers do the same. The best way to ensure there are no
surprises as the season develops is for the manager to hold a meeting and set
the tone early. He should let the parents know that he knows whathe is doing and
help them develop confidence in him during this first team meeting.
10. The only way to build a good team out of a group of individuals is through
effective practice. On the field, you have to be a teacher as well as a coach.
Teach them what they need to know, show them what you taught them, practice the
things you taught them over and over, then be prepared to do it all over again.
11. Practice, by definition, presumes repetition. Repetition is the keystone of
successful game preparation. However, repetition soon turns into monotony with
players, particularly tee ball players, unless you: (1) PLAN every aspect of
every practice right down to the minute, (2) Maintain a distinct sense of MOTION
to your practices and a coherent FLOW to them, and (3) Make a GAME out of as
many things as you can.
|
|
MORE 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.