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by Gerald Warner, Softball Pitching Instructor
For
Softball Pitchers, ages 8 and Up
What to Do...and In What Order
PHASE I

1.
Throw a minimum of 300 practice pitches each week.
(400 would be okay, too).
Practice…hard, serious practice...is everything. If
you don't practice, you won't become a good pitcher. Learning to
"windmill" pitch is not going to be easy. You need to build up to
the point where you can throw 100 to 125 underhand pitches every two
or three days.
2. Master the
mechanics of the pitch first
…then speed.
Work on learning and
developing proper mechanics.
Then as you become more smooth and consistent with your motion,
start adding speed. Do NOT worry about control right now…it will
come later. Make certain you use: Consistent arm speed the whole
way around; Arm extended (not bent) the whole
way; Don't use only your arm and upper body to throw the
ball...use the lower portion too...stay tall (don't
bend at the waist) as your arm approaches your hip, then
bring your hip through ith the pitch.
Release the ball at your knee with the inside of the wrist straight
ahead… facing home plate. Then follow-through…let your hand come up
after the release, usually palm up, or whatever is natural to you.
AFTER your mechanics
are smooth and comfortable, THEN you can work to increase your
pitching speed to make it consistently fast.
PHASE II - Control Your Pitch
& Yourself
3. Throw at least
400 practice pitches each week (500
is okay, too).
4. Develop control.
You can develop good control ONLY if
you can control yourself. Stay in your own head…whether in
practice or in a real game situation…don't get distracted. Don't
worry about a bad pitch, or fans or teammates yelling, or the
umpire's call. Don't complain, whine, or make bad facial
expressions. You MUST keep control…and show everyone else that you
are the one in control. YOU run the game.
Then, after you get a
smooth, comfortable pitching motion...and with good speed... and
after you really feel and look confident...THEN start working on
accuracy and placement of your pitches. Use the "4 corners": low
and inside, low and outside, high and inside, and high and outside.
5.
Develop a GOOD change-up pitch…then use it.
The speed of the change-up should be about ¾
(70% to 80%) of the speed of your fastball…in
other words, about 12-18 miles per hour slower. Grip the ball far
back in your hand. There are several ways to throw a change-up
(stiff wrist, circle change, back of hand, etc.)
each with your normal motion and arm speed. The key is to have no
wrist snap…keep your wrist locked. The idea is to not let the batter
know the ball will be coming in slower. Your facial expression and
your windmill delivery need to look exactly the same as your
fastball. Make certain your coach and your catcher don't always
call the change-up only when you have two strikes on the batter.
Mix up your pitches…sometimes use the change-up on the first pitch…
other times on a 2-ball, 1-strike count, etc.
Count on a minimum of 6 months to
learn to throw a good, deceptive change-up accurately. ANY new
pitch you learn (a change-up, drop ball, screwball,
curve, rise ball, etc.) might each take up to 10,000 pitches
before you get used to it. Be patient. Work hard to make each
pitch work the way it supposed to.
PHASE III - After all of
Phase II is done
6. Develop a drop
ball…then work on it to make it really drop.
You need to make it
have a fast and perfect top-to-bottom spin as it goes toward the
plate. There are two common styles:
PEEL DROP -
Throw it like your fastball, but roll it or snap it up, off the tips
of your fingers, to create a bottom-to-top spin,
OR
ROLL-OVER DROP - Release the ball by "snapping it
over" to create the bottom-to-top spin. A good drop ball can be very
effective because it drops below the batter's bat, making her either
hit only the top of the ball for a grounder, or hopefully, swing
totally over the ball.
NOTE: Both the "peel" or the "roll-over" style of
drop ball is more effective if you keep your upper body weight
forward (without bending at the waist)...directly
over the stride foot at the time of release. This is seen by many
pitchers as "being on top of the ball" and gives a greater
opportunity to give the ball a fast forward spin when thrown.
7.
Off Speed Pitch
In many pitchers' cases the "rollover" style
drop ball will be approximately 6 to 8 miles an hour slower than the
fastball, and therefore is a combined drop/off-speed pitch. You
need something between the speed of your fastball and your
change-up. Just like with the change-up, no batter or opposing
coach should be able to tell when you are throwing it.
8.
Make certain your pitches all look the same.
A batter should not be able to tell what kind
of pitch you are going to throw. Keep your grip hidden by your
glove. Don't show your grip until you start your backswing. Don't
"telegraph" which pitch you are going to thrown by using a certain
facial expression or a different motion.
PHASE IV
(don't go too fast...this phase is years away)
9.
To gain confidence, throw 600 (or more)
pitches per week. Never let more
than 2 days go by without practicing. Practice alone doesn't make
perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect. Work to make your last
pitch better. Perfect the pitches you have learned. Learn to stay
cool and always show that YOU are in control. Never let them see
you sweat!
10. Learn one more
pitch (that works)…a curve, screwball, or
rise.
A
curve ball can be effective if
it is really deceptive, and really curves. The primary problem with
a curve is that it is thrown on the same level as the batter
swings. Even if it curves a little, it is still "hittable."
A screwball is a pitch
that curves IN on a right-handed batter…it looks like it is coming
across the plate…then it moves in toward the batter's hands. It IS
possible to throw a screwball that also rises.
A good rise ball
can be your most effective pitch…provided you can get
it to work every time. Thrown right, it will rise just before it
gets to the plate, forcing the batter to swing under it…popping it
up, or missing it altogether. If it doesn't work right,
the ball levels out chest-high, and you will give the batter a fat
pitch up in her power zone. It will take a lot of practice…many
months…to develop a good, effective rise ball. Even many college
pitchers still cannot throw a good rise that works consistently.
Article by Gerald Warner of
PitchSoftball.com
Used with permission. |