Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Is a pitcher REALLY an athlete?

A lot of people have a difficult time justifying the use of the word "athlete" when it comes to pitchers. There logic states that if a guy can be 40 lbs overweight and be a "professional" is it really an "athletic" position? Or is it simply an athletic skill? 

In other words, what does it really take to be a pitcher?

If we watch pitchers, most of the time they simply chuck and duck. But then consider what they need to be able to do after they duck: they may have to field the ball, sprint to first, sprint to back-up home or even dive to get out of the way of a ball.

That's quite a lot! 

So we've identified what a pitcher has to be able to do in addition to throwing. And there are many great pitching coaches who can teach a player how to pitch. But do coaches ever work on actually playing the position?

That is something that may require a bit more skill. When you have to react that quick, that infrequently, there may be some additional training that is necessary. First off, simply reaction time is start. But don't go trying to hit line drives right at your athletes for the sake of reaction time training. There are safer ways to go about it

The second part of this should be footwork and foot speed. Improving a pitchers foot speed is paramount in allowing them to react quickly to the ball as well as find the bag when covering first or field a ball that comes to them. 



These are very underrated qualities in a pitcher. Many people tend to forget that as soon as the ball leaves his hand, he is a position player. As such, his training should reflect that. Foot speed can be developed by using low boxes, agility drills, ladder drills, partner mirror drills and rapid response-to-sprint drills.


At Pair & Marotta Peak Performance this is what we do. We train players to be athletes, not just pitchers. We currently have our Off-Season Baseball/Softball Training Camp that meets on Monday, Wednesday and Friday's from 3:30-5pm. If you've got the desire to improve your foot speed, reaction time and agility, then we've got the program that will do it.


For more information, contact me at aaron@pairmarotta.com or call 661-912-9991.

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