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i just think its trying to be someone you arent by wearing that shirt on the field. others may disagree, but that was really my only problem with the shirt itself. [Edited by briancurtin on Mar 13th, 2006 at 09:39 AM] |
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*shrug* I only relate the situation as it is. Where I work, F2 jumps up the instant a ball goes to the backstop (even fouled off), so they are obviously taught to do that at their level (for whatever reason, I don't know). There's almost never a F2 to hand a ball to, if I were so inclined. If the ball is obviously 'out', F2 will stand and put his mitt out to me for a ball. If he isn't sure its 'out', then he's off to the races, and I'm tossing a ball to F1 (who's walked toward me to ~ 45 feet). I haven't missed a toss yet, although there's always a first time. I will have to try calling 'on-deck!' sometime to see if the ODB reacts. Might be entertaining. |
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Change not a bad thing~
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Simply tell F2, "we'll let the ondeck guys to the chasing tonight, give them something to do". F2 will love you for it, and the time saved in a three hour game .... Might take a few reminders, but after a couple of innings everyone should be on board. thanks David |
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At the pre-game meeting, "remind" the coaches that the on-deck batter should retrieve all loose balls when the bases are empty: wild pitch, passed ball, foul: "Coach, don't forget to let them know that's their job." Second: The first time the catcher starts for a ball that the on-deck batter should get, say: "Wait up, Hoss!" Finally: Before your post, I had never heard of an "area" where the catchers chased free balls. Amazing! How about letting us know what part of the country that is? Added: My conscience reminded me that the on-deck batter CANNOT get the loose ball after a wild pitch/passed ball because that never occurs unless a runner moves up a base. What I meant to say was: "The on-deck batter should retrieve loose balls, i.e, foul balls or pitches not controlled by the catcher." [Edited by Carl Childress on Mar 13th, 2006 at 02:43 PM] |
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Carl's suggestions work for the Frosh ball -- where they are "learning" the ropes. They are genererally ineffective for the lower level stuff. Above Frosh, the players generally have learned what to do. |
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And
The level of ball often dictates the layout of the field: if all you've got is 10 feet between F2 and the backstop, it's not much of a burden for F2 to fetch. At higher levels, where there's 60 feet, it makes more sense for someone else to do it.
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Cheers, mb |
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down, not F2.
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All generalizations are bad. - R.H. Grenier |
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You are fortunate, then. |
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Tighten them up LMan!!
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Get it right the 1st time, if not then just move on. |
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