Pitching Tips
- General
- Basic Pitches
- Set-up
General
It has been said that good pitching will
usually beat good hitting. The teams that have been the most consistently successful
have been those with good pitching. At the youth level, one of the most
important attributes is the ability to throw a good fastball in the location
you want to. Establishing a good fastball with good control must precede the
development of an off-speed pitch, as generally the off-speed is set up by
being ahead in the count and having the batter anticipate a fastball.
Basic Pitches
- The basic fastball grips are the two-seam and
four-seam fastball.
- The two-seam fastball is
gripped along the two short seams. If thrown with the correct motion,
this pitch will tend to sink and tail away slightly.
- The four-seam fastball is
gripped across seams. This pitch will provide for a harder straighter
pitch. The four-seam grip is the grip that ideally should be used by the
fielders to generate a hard straight throw.
- The second recommended pitch to develop is the
change-up. Four-time NL CY Young winner Greg Maddox has used this pitch
extremely effectively over his career. There are multiple grips that can
be used.
- One of them is the circle
change grip where the pitcher forms a circle with his thumb and pointer
finger and places it on the side of the ball and then he places his next
2 fingers on the top of the ball. His pinky finger rests underneath.
- Many young pitchers hands
will not be large enough to throw the circle change and may have to throw
the 3 finger change where he grips the ball deep into his hand with his
2nd, 3rd and 4th fingers on top of the ball with his thumb and pinky
underneath.
- Another is the football change
where the ball is gripped and thrown like a football.
- Once the young pitcher has developed a good
fastball and change-up, then he can develop the curve. The curve should be
thrown with the same arm slot as the fastball and change, but with a
different grip and hand location.
- The curve is gripped with the
pointer and the middle finger, with the middle finger along the bottom of
the horseshoe shaped seam.
- Instead of releasing the ball
with your hand behind the ball like you would with a fastball, you should
release it with your hand to the side of the ball, over the top, with a
pull down of the ball.
Set-Up
With no runners on, the pitcher will generally
be is the Wind-Up position. The pitcher should place his heels on the rubber
about 6-8 inches apart. The pitcher should hold his glove in front of him so
that the batter and base coach's will not be able to see what grip he is
using.
When receiving the sign, you should be in a
comfortable position with your knees slightly bent and your shoulders and hips
square to the plate.
- Your first movement will be a short step back
and slightly to the side with your left foot (for Right handed pitcher,
for lefty reverse all future left/right references). Try to keep your head
and shoulders still during this step back. Your hands may move up towards
your chin or eyes. It is important to keep balanced during the remainder
of the wind-up as any excess momentum one way or the other will impact the
pitcher's control. Once the left foot has stepped back the right foot
moves to become flush with the rubber.
- The pitcher pivots his body so that his body is
now facing third base (first base for lefty).
- While pivoting, the pitcher lifts his front
leg, such that his thigh is at least parallel to the ground. This is what
is referred to as the 'Balance Point'. The pitcher's weight should be
directly over the rubber such that if he stopped in this position he would
not fall one way or the other.
- Once in the balance point the pitcher will want
to now bring his front leg down near the surface of the mound and then out
towards the plate. As the pitcher begins his movement towards home plate,
his hands separate thumbs down. At time of front foot landing with a
slightly bent knee and on the balls of the foot and at only a slight angle
to the plate, his elbows should be at shoulder height. The throwing arm
should be cocked (about 90 degrees) with the fingers on top of the ball
facing the shortstop or centerfielder.
- After the front foot lands, the hips open to
the plate, which allows the body to bend forward. The lead arm rotates
inward and down, the throwing arm continues smoothly through with the
throwing elbow above the shoulder with the hand behind the ball, not
under.
- The throwing arm should follow through all the
way around and should finish around the lead foot ankle. The back leg
should then come around and land even with the lead leg and the pitcher
should now be a in a good fielding position.