A New World Of Baseball Hitting Aids

By Agnes Dickson


Hitting tools can help hone a young batter's inherent talent and make the best of it soonest. Keen vision and quick reflexes certainly don't hurt when it comes to teeing the ball, but a balanced and disciplined swing is essential. The only way to cultivate that fine a swing is through many repetitions, and a great many repetitions is difficult to maintain if the youngster is forever gathering baseballs from the outfield. Baseball hitting aids are a good resource for gaining repetitions.

A good place to begin might be with perhaps the simplest aid of all, the everyday batting tee. It does just what a golf tee would do but holds the ball higher, usually between thirty and forty-five inches high. This is a good range for younger hitters just perfecting their stroke.

With a portable screen added to hitting practice, a batter can not only use the tee all afternoon but won't have to interrupt practice by spending time going out after the balls he or she has crushed. Many nets also have brightly colored targets that are stitched into the net to show the player where and how well they are nailing the ball. Screens and tees are useful for practicing both baseball and softball, and are typically built to stay put on windy days.

The entire problem of catching the batted ball before it flies off is altogether avoided by using a swing tee. With such a tee the ball is fixed to an arm that swings around an axis, that arm being parallel to the practice field itself. When the ball is struck it quickly is whipped about its stalk, then snaps back relatively slowly.

Any sort of batting tee is good enough for honing one's form through repetition, but none can simulate the action of being pitched to by a real pitcher. Unfortunately, needing to have a pitcher to practice with almost always means having to cut down on the repetitions one needs, not just with form, but to practice seeing the ball into the strike zone and timing that first move to ball. Here, a pitching machine is a crucial piece of equipment.

One might reflexively assume a pitching machine might be expensive, enough so that one might not expect to see one except at a ballpark or a batting range. These days, however, pitching machines have been scaled down to where they are just right for boys and girls, and at that scale made to be as inexpensive as a better catcher's mitt, or even less expensive than that. Indeed these machines have become some of the most economical hitting aids one might find.

There are backyard protection nets, like rooms with netting for walls, built to hold in balls blasted off either a pitcher or a pitching machine, whichever is available. On the pricier end are the packages a training equipment, frequently associate with a big league star. In these packages, which combine equipment, there usually is more distinction between softball and baseball.

A lot of the kind of equipment that was once the domain of league ball teams is available now to the common suburban household. Its scale is smaller but it is still built tough enough to handle a pounding. This is a toolkit that makes young batters better all over the world.




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