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The First? Fielder

by Dave
Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Paul writes in to ask:
My daughter, a pitcher, has some problems fielding her position defensively.   She tends to have a panicked look when the ball is hit back to her and loses focus on what to do with it once in her glove.   Part of this is fear of getting hit with an odd bounce and part is just lack of proper fielding technique.   After that she needs to understand where her place is after a hit and she needs to move to a back up position.   I don't want to teach her the wrong things but need to get her working on this.


Here is my response:

The very first thing I want to address to you is the "fear factor."   Pitchers may develop a fear of balls being hit back at them, especially if they have a little scar shaped like laces on the ball or located where their broken nose or jaw was fixed.   It's very tough to be so close to the gal with the stick in her hand.   I strongly believe that every pitcher needs to be schooled on keeping the pitch away from the sweet spot on the bat, that is, to hit corners on every pitch.   If you can paint corners, your fear of having a hotshot hit back at you should gradually diminish.

My personal belief is that in fastpitch softball, pitches should never be on the middle 8 inches of the plate.   From 10 or 11 on, pitchers must be taught to work corners.   Our game's ball is just too big and bright.   1 thorugh 9 of any team worth its salt can rip it when it is thrown down the midddle.

Some of us out here watch too much baseball on TV and fall in love with a 95 mph fastball thrown down the middle, challenging the hitter to catch up with it.   That's baseball, not fastpitch softball.   I am an advocate of teaching pitchers to throw hard before learning command.   But even I have my limits.   I don't particularly care whether your 11 year old can hit 55-60 on your coach's radar gun.   If she throws that cheese down the middle, eventually she is going to find someone who can hit it and hit it hard.   If the ball is in the center of the plate, chances are pretty good that the 60 mph pitch is going to come back at her at 94-98.   And that may end your stud's pitching career regardless of how fast she can throw.   Stay on the corners.   It is extremely rare for a hitter to hit anything on the corners hard, straight back at the pitcher.   That is the first thing you need to teach your pitcher in terms of defense.

(As an aside, to umpires who "require" the pitch right down the middle - who don't give corners, particularly when one team is beating another pretty badly, you must be ready to take personal responsibility for the broken noses, jaws and other body parts, the shortened careers, etc. which your approach has caused.   I have seen so many umps change their zone or do other things to make the game move along or to provide the beaten down team with something, anything, to make them feel less bad.   Just the other day, the field ump called our runner out when she was obviously safe in order to end the top of the first because we were up by 7 already.   He pretty much admitted this to me.   He noted to me that the other team was all 11s.   So I told them we have 5x11s and 1x10 on the field with just 3 young 12s.   I think he was a little surprised but not as surprised as he was when the other team scored 3 runs in the bottom half and then held us down in the top of the second before scoring again in their half.   Umpires should never try to control games like that.   That's what the time limit and run rules are for.   And they shouldn't try to make pitchers throw down the middle unless they want somebody injured.)

A lot of how a pitcher does things defensively depends on her team's coaches and players.   General fielding (balls back at her) is a matter of normal fielding mechanics, athleticism, repetition, and confidence.   Let me try to develop this topic, give you some advice on what you can do, and try to list some of the issues which may vary from team to team and situation to situation.

A pitcher is in a difficult position defensively, standing about 35 feet from the plate after release.   She needs to get immediately in some sort of defensive position after release.   She needs to be in shape physically so that her reactions are good.   And she needs to practice fielding mechanics the same way any other player does.

The first, most important step, is to get into a good ready position.   That means low, balanced, and ready to move.   In my opinion, she should not aspire to get quite as low with her glove as the third baseman whose glove should probably be just inches from the ground, if not actually touching it.   There's not enough time for that anyway but it isn't necessarily the best defensive position for a pitcher.   Most balls hit back at the pitcher are bouncing ones hit hard into the dirt.   She should be low but not as low as 3B and her glove should be about knee high, in front of her, and open.   Pitchers sometimes close their gloves hard or slap it into their thighs as they release the pitch.   They need to be schooled to get it out in front, open and ready to make a play right after this.

Her knees need to be bent, feet even and about shoulder width apart.   Her glove hand should be out in front of her.   And her shoulders should be square with the plate.   You can't do anything without a good ready position.   You can't move equally well to either side if your feet aren't squared up.   So your first goal should be to finish the pitch with a good ready position after release.

The second consideration is physical conditioning.   If you want to react faster to balls hit back at you, being in the best physical shape is the pathway regardless of natural athletic ability.   Kids who are in the best shape they can be will necessarily have shorter reaction times.   A good off-season, or in, program of speed and agility is advisable for any softball player.   The same is true of pitchers.   While it is a given that everybody possesesses different athletic ability, engaging in a good speed/agility program can help anyone.   It will also help a pitcher's pitching so I encourage you to pursue this.

Pitchers, like anyone else who walks onto a softball field need to be schooled in fielding mechanics.   My guess is your daughter doesn't pitch every inning of every game she plays in.   She could play many other positions.   She should be schooled in fielding mechanics of all varities at this age in any event.   If there are good fielding clinics near you, Kobata, etc., sign her up.   Aside from this, I would hope your team's coaches work all the girls at fielding mechanics of all positions anyway.   If they do not, you need to have her out fielding grounders, linedrives, etc. from all positions just for her own development.   If you can get out once or twice a week to hit a half hour's worth of balls, that will definitely help her.

The next consideration is drills for fielding grounders from her position after release.   Repetition is the key to sound fielding at any position and this does not exclude the pitcher.   I recently saw a pretty good drill for doing this run at an OC Batbusters clinic.   Basically, you put a girl at first, a catcher behind the plate, and the pitcher out in the circle.   The pitcher pitches the ball like she would in a game and a coach immediately hits a grounder back at her. She fields it and throws to first.   You can place fielders at each of the bases or have her throw home as you wish.   Obviously the footwork on throws to each of the bases is different and should be practiced.

The coach should hit all sorts of balls to the pitcher.   You want hard ones and soft ones, liners at her feet, bouncing balls to either side and so on.   Coaches should do something like this in practice but if they don't, talk to them about a "drill I saw done" and describe this to them.   You need to have other players to do this drill so it's best done at team practice.

Sometimes coaches will assemble an infield and hit balls to the various fielders including the girl standing around the pitcher's plate.   This doesn't get the job done.   Sometimes the coaches will have the pitcher mimick making a real pitch.   This isn't enough either as she will go through the motion but make getting ready her primary goal.   The pitcher needs to throw a pitch and then make a fielding play.   And it is really so simple to do.   There's no good reason not to spend 5-10 minutes on this at every or every other practice.

If you cannot convince your team to do my (really the OC Batbuster's) drill, I suggest modifying it at your local field.   If you can't get somebody to catch or play the bases, use surrogates.   A pop-up net will suffice for a catcher.   Most fields have garbage cans standing around - move one over to cover first.   And then hit away.   This is certainly not optimal but do what you have to do to get this work in.

Additionally, there needs to be an understanding between the pitcher, the coaches, and all other infielders regarding what a pitcher's responsibility is on struck balls.   My team uses a general rule of thumb which is a pitcher's responsibility for fielding a ball ends inside the circle.   That is, she should not have to run outside the circle to field grounders and pop-ups.   Bunts are the responsibility of the first and third basemen.   There are obvious exceptions to this and the pitcher will end up fielding surprise drag bunts and other balls which do not fit neatly into my general rule of thumb - those will be practiced in the drill I discussed above.

In my experience, there's no need top tell a pitcher to go after balls.   Usually she will naturally and reactively go after a lot of plays beyond her area of responsibility.   But it is important to let her know that she has a team of four infielders behind her, excluding the catcher who generally will cover anything hit within a few feet of home, and she needs to develop judgment about what she can and cannot do better than the other fielders.

The corollary to this is, while a pitcher should not field a ball outside the circle, even if the ball is in the circle and another fielder can make the play, the pitcher needs to let them do that.   This is really a pop-up rule.   If a batter hits an infield pop-up with any real height to it, the pitcher should not usually make that play.   If the ball is coming down in front of her, that is typically first or third's play.   If the ball is coming down to her left at or beyond the circle, that's either 2B or SS's play.   If the ball is right in the circle, the SS should take charge and call for it.   In these cases, the pitcher should get out of the circle and away from the play, allowing her middle infielders to make it.

About a year ago I witnessed a play on which a pop-up was hit sky-high and came down about where the pitcher's plate is located.   The pitcher stood there, hands high, watching the pop-up come down.   I'm not sure whether I heard both the pitcher and SS call for it, or if nobody actually did.   But in any event, the SS and P collided and the ball fell to the ground.   By the way, the bases happened to be full and there were two outs at the time of the "major league pop-up."   I don't recall how many runs scored but I think it was two.   That left runners on second and third with still two outs.   The next girl lined a single into the gap and both baserunners scored.   That one simple play allowed four runs to score.   And that was a Gold level game.   The defensive team never recovered from those four runs.

I think sometimes we, as coaches, coach a little too much to the age group we have in front of us.   In 10U ball, often the team has something like 3-5 good players, often including the girls who pitch.   We encourage the pitcher to get to everything she can and make the play because it is a matter of winning and losing.   At 12U, we should hope to have more than 3 players who can make routine plays every time but sometimes because of conditions beyond our control, we still encourage the pitcher to make every play she possibly can.

Even at 14U, I have heard coaches encourage pitchers to do similarly.   I like to think of this as the "BNB principle" which is, the tendency to view the team like one would the Bad News Bears - a few good players who should be encouraged to jump in front of all those kids who "don't belong out there" and make every play they possibly can.   But the question is, what does this practice do to the kid who continues to pitch into her later teens, perhaps even playing at the Gold level?   What it does is set up the play on which an infield pop results in the pitcher running into another infielder, maybe getting hurt in the process, and allowing 4 runs that should never have seen the light of day to score.

So, in this discussion, what I'm saying to you is teach the pitcher to get out of the way on high pops, to field balls only within the circle, and let her infielders field the rest of them including ordinary bunts.   That is true regardless of age level since every 10 year old is eventually going to be 18, God willing.   She will naturely field some balls outside the circle anyway.   She doesn't need to be told to do that.   What she needs to hear is that her fielding responsibility should usually end at the pitcher's circle line.   Teach good habits early.   Don't subscribe to the BNB primciple.

With this in mind, I certainly recognize that not all teams' coaches will agree with me.   And you do have to get along with your team's coaches.   But there are limits to what you as the pitcher's parent should tolerate.   One of my kid's teams follows the BNB principle due to a certain lack of talent on the roster.   For example, we have a first baseman who cannot field a bunt.   To me, a first baseman who cannot field a bunt is similar to a slap-hitter who tends to pop the ball up.   I call that person by a particular name which is "bench player."   A first baseman who cannot field a bunt is not a first baseman.

The first baseman also cannot field a pop-up more than 5 feet in front of her, no matter how high it is hit.   She sees her role on the defensive side of the equation as one in which her job is to get to the bag and then catch the throw from infielders.   Anything that is too far to her right is left for the 2B to field because she just has to get to the bag.

I'm not a coach on that team.   Actually the father of 1B is a coach.   And he encourages this errant approach because he is far too steeped in baseball.   He doesn't know anything about the FP game.   So he has schooled the girl that her primary responsibility is covering the bag.   And the other coaches feel there is nothing they can do about this.   So, instead of correcting the mistaken approach to playing the position, they tell the pitcher to get everything to her left.   This includes all bunts, every soft grounder, and pop-ups.   They don't worry about the P colliding with the first baseman since she will see the ball is more than five feet in front of her and retreat to cover the bag.

(As an aside, the 1B also believes any throw that is not perfectly thrown is not her responsibility.   If she cannot catch it without moving her feet, it isn't her responsibility.   I've never heard her corrected for not pursuing the ball first and the bag second.   I just don't understand how any coach or parent can allow a first baseman to continue to play the game at that position with such a wrong understanding of what her responsibilities are.   But they do and maybe you've seen similar circumstances too.   But to me, a team which follows this approach is a team we won't be playing with any longer.)

As far as backing up bases, etc., this often really depends on your team's approach.   Some teams use the pitcher as the primary cutoff between other fielders and home.   Some teams teach their first baseman to perform this function.   Obviously, if the pitcher is the primary cutoff, she is not responsible for backing up bases.   Her work is to get lined up between the catcher and the outfielder or infield cutoff between her and the outfield.   My personal preference is for the 1B to be primary cutoff and the pitcher to be a base backup.   I think at higher levels this is usually the case.   But I don't want to go any further into the topic because I have seen a fairly wide amount of variation and regardless of what I said about the BNB principle or the lack of talent at other positions, the pitcher should perform base back up responsibilities in conformity with her team's practices.   I'm not willing to be taken to task on this issue as I was with the other one.

Base backup responsibilities are not something you can handle within a vacuum.   You need to have this covered in practice.   Yes, I have seen teams which never handle cutoffs or base backups in practice and then scream at the pitcher for being out of position on base backups.   This is wrong and maybe there is nothing we can do about it other than to have a discussion with coaches that these things need to be handled in practice.

Aside from this, I think the bottom line is, if the pitcher has base backup responsibilities, the coaches do not handle this in practice regardless of how much you implore them to do so, and you are frustrated about what to tell your pitcher daughter, here are my suggestions:

If the backstop is not a college one where there is considerable distance between it and homeplate, there is no purpose to trying to backup the catcher on plays at the plate.   If the play is at home and nowhere else, the best you can do is pick a point to retrieve errant throws.   I believe that is a point along the third baseline in foul ground.   The first baseman should cover the area in front of home along that baseline.   And the 3B should be covering her bag since, if there may be a play at home, there may also be a play at third.

If the backup seems to be most important at third but the fence and out of play are say 15-20 feet from the bag, again, I suggest about the same position though closer to third than home.   This way if the ball gets away from the 3B towards home, she can retrieve it quickly.   If the ball goes out of control up the line towards the outfield, the LF should get after those.   If the LF is making the throw to third, the pitcher would need to be in foul ground along the baseline anyways to back up the throw.   Otherwise the LF should be crashing in and handle everything up the line.   Some coaches would have the pitcher positioned right behind third to prevent the bad throw from going out of play.   But if the pitcher is just 10-15 feet behind the 3B, there is little chance she'll be able to make a play on anything the 3B can't get.   I believe along the line in foul ground is the place to be.

On all other plays, where the ball is going to 1B, 2B or just in to some infielder, the pitcher, and everyone else for that matter, need to be aware that the ball may get away and be prepared to retrieve it quickly in such eventuality.   Just as I want the first baseman to be wide awake and aware that a throw in to second on a basehit with nobody on may go astray, I want the pitcher to be watching any throw in that might get away.   Everyone should backup every throw just as the 2B must backup all throwbacks to the pitcher with a runner on.   Outfielders make mistakes just like anyone else, even on easy, no action plays.   Everyone needs to be awake on every pitch, every play, every throw in.

As far as learning the situation on which a pitcher needs to back up home, if appropriate, third, etc., given that she is not the primary infield cutoff, I'm not sure what to tell you.   Basically, this is dictated by game and inning situation which I'll get to in a minute.   More importantly, the coaches need to explain to their pitchers where they want them on certain situations or during the actual play.   The best teams conduct drills with this in mind, remind pitchers before the play develops, and then instruct them during the play.   This is just like having a baserunner on first with one or no outs and telling them to watch linedrives.   You've taught them this in practice, you tell them the situation when they are on first, and then you scream "BACK" when there is an actual linedrive.   The same should be done defensively.

When, say, a ball is hit to the outfield and gets past the fielder, coaches should be instructing, for example, the SS to go out and get the cutoff.   They also should be judging where the play is going to develop based on where the ball is coming to a rest, the apparent speed of the baserunner(s), etc.   In doing this, if they want the pitcher to, for example, back up third, they should yell this to her.   What should never happen is a situation in which the coach wants the pitcher to back up third, he or she never says anything (either in practice or before or during the play), and then when the right backup has not taken place, the coach rants and raves at the pitcher for failing to backup.   That does happen but it is wrong.

Finally, it is an absolute that every player on the field needs to know the game and inning situation on every pitch and have some idea of what they will do if a ball is hit their way.   The CF needs to be aware that she cannot merely soft toss the ball in to the 2B after a hit when there is a runner on second.   She needs to know that there may very well be a play at home.   Similarly, with runners on first and second, a pitcher needs to know that if a grounder is hit back to her, she is going to third with her throw.   I don't need to go over all the possible situations.   You ought to be able to handle this in practice if you are a coach or jot it down on paper and go over it with your daughter if you are the pitcher's parent.

The bottom line is, before throwing every pitch, a pitcher needs to check off in her mind where she will go with the ball if X happens.   Sometimes, it can be difficult to do this with young kids.   It is difficult but it still needs to be done. It is an important part of any player's development.   You cannot move up to the next level if you do not think this game through on every pitch.   It is as important as getting into a ready position or learning good fielding mechanics.   If you have to stop and think after you field the ball, you're dead at least 75% of the time.

In closing, teach your daughter to get in a ready position after release.   Do this whether you are conducting pitching practice or running specific drills.   Improve her athleticism by engaging in speed/agility drills or by signing up for clinics which do this.   Anything that improves her physical condition will improve her ability as a ballplayer and pitcher.   Teach her good general defensive skills.   She needs this anyway.   She may decide to quit pitching in future years but still want to play ball anyways.   Good defensive skills are a necessity for every player who wants to keep playing.   Conduct drills specific to the pitcher position.   I gave you one.   Maybe you'll find others in your travels.   But do something.   Try to convince your team's coaches to conduct pitcher-specific fielding drills.   If you are unsuccessful, conduct some on your own.   The drills must involve throwing a real pitch and then fielding a ball and making a throw to a base.   Teach your pitchers, whether you are a team coach or just a mild mannered parent, what the limits of their responsibilities are - in the process also teach the other fielders to take charge in the right circumstances.   Teach your pitchers to think through game and inning situations before making the pitch.   If you find yourself on a team which follows the BNB principle, get away from them.   You are doing your daughter a disservice if you stay.   And eventually, through lots of repetition, discussion, and learning, you should develop your pitchers' defensive skills.

Follow-up:

Tom writes in to discuss something for the pitcher which I'll include here and in another place I mention defensive drills for pitchers:

"One of the more important drills that I've seen involve teaching pitchers to defend themselves from batted balls.   A fielded ball can result in an out and a missed ball can take out your pitcher for the season.   The most effective practice that I have discovered uses the lite-flite Jugs ball.   They look like softballs and throw like softballs but don't break anything.   When the pitcher is in her workout, the coach throws lit-flites back at her to defend as she pitches to the catcher, starting easy and moving to more difficult.   We work with her trying to deflect the ball with her glove and not using her throwing throwing hand.   Pitchers tend to try to catch with the bare hand which can cause a season ending injury)   We work with her to get into a defensive position as soon as possible after delivering the pitch.   Again this is practiced with the emphasis on safety and NOT on making a play.   I can get the next out but I can't replace an injured pitcher easily.   This changes her focus and quite frankly her overall fielding improves as her confidence increases."

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