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 Can anyone recommend a good OF coach

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
15UBaseball Posted - 11/30/2017 : 15:32:32
I see recommendations for hitting and pitching coaches, can anyone recommend a really really good outfield coach for older senior in HS?
Colleges are wanting him to move from infield to OF.
16   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
Andrewdixon64 Posted - 02/13/2018 : 10:32:47
My name is Andrew Dixon played outfield for the Giants and Brewers stole alot of bases I also do lessons for outfield and hitting and running 3522865125
Shut Out Posted - 01/04/2018 : 09:53:54
Ric Bishop @ 643 is the best outfield coach around.
BlueDevilBaseball Posted - 01/03/2018 : 15:39:21
It’s ok to throw behind the runner.
holly19 Posted - 01/02/2018 : 11:24:12
You need to find an agility coach that specializes in baseball agilities, heck any agility really. Footwork and the ability to read the ball off the bat, so one is agility and the other is repetitive work. Then there is situational too...but I'm guessing as a senior you're wanting to develop better footwork and read more than situational stuff. Find an agility coach, that'd be my suggestion.
nastycurve Posted - 12/20/2017 : 10:06:04
Moving from IF to OF is a lot easier than moving from OF to IF. Understanding angles, listening for instruction of where to throw, Throwing through the cut are beginning of being an outfielder.

Here is a link to a video my sons college did for their outfielders a couple years ago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aSG2VRJuVZQ


It might give him some more understanding of the knowledge hell need to play OF in college. I think its based off a power point so you will need to pause it some in the beginning.

Drop me an email if you need someone to train him to be an outfielder, Ive got a great guy. His pricing is great and he actually cares about the kids he works with and gets them better.
prestont Posted - 12/10/2017 : 17:55:47
Kenny James or Wes Rynders. Both are excellent.

15U - what part of town do ya live in?
15UBaseball Posted - 12/05/2017 : 12:56:35
Those sound like drills for younger kids how old is your son's team?
tellit Posted - 12/05/2017 : 11:27:24
My son's coach works on the outfielders finding the fence then looking back for the ball, proper crow hop mechanics, how to make sure your head is not bouncing all over the place when sprinting for a fly ball, how to shield the sun using your glove, how to catch it on your throwing side when you have to get rid of the ball quick. Like everything else, the more you do yourself on the side the better you will be.



Hurricane Posted - 12/05/2017 : 08:52:44
A good bit or difference between outfield and infield is reps off a bat. Sometimes they move pro guys from infield to outfield and it takes them awhile to adjust. So wouldn't you think if a pro player who has played baseball most of his life would be able to adjust on a fly. Some can never make the adjustment. I agree a program like 643 really goes into detail about outfield play although I have no experience with other programs and their outfield I am sure there are some good ones or try and find a guy that played outfield in the minor leagues and have him work with him.
CaCO3Girl Posted - 12/04/2017 : 08:07:21
quote:
Originally posted by tellit

quote:
Originally posted by CaCO3Girl

I'm not sure what there is to coach....hit him a million balls and have him practice which paths work best for him? Then throw in as fast and accurate as he can?




"And you want to be my latex salesman"




Nope, don't want to sell anyone anything :- ) I think that is my glitch with coaches.

Seriously a senior who has played baseball for most of his life doesn't know most of that stuff? We arne't talking about dropping a kid on the field who has NEVER played, we are talking about converting an IF to an OF.
Renegade44 Posted - 12/02/2017 : 10:22:26
What's an outfielder? I didn't pay the academy $5,000 to play outfield??

8.) Wood bat hook/slice/fade vs metal bat
9.) 2 steps in equals more steps than I can count wrong.
10.) Counting clover leafs is not ready to compete every pitch.
gloveside2 Posted - 12/02/2017 : 08:34:13
Outfielders at every level after a certain age need coaches or can learn from them. YOu think pro guys never are coached? We had a clemson grad really help our kids. Note. They also run bases and hit.

1. how to drop step
2. sun/wind battles
3. how do approach ball with men on base vs empty
4. how to pick a ball up that is sitting at the fence..yes there is a way
5. when a ball is bouncing on the grass do you count bounces?
6. pivot throws
7. all in throws
i could go on but some would not grasp how deep the knowledge and skill is that it requires.
tellit Posted - 12/01/2017 : 15:25:22
quote:
Originally posted by CaCO3Girl

I'm not sure what there is to coach....hit him a million balls and have him practice which paths work best for him? Then throw in as fast and accurate as he can?




"And you want to be my latex salesman"

SPBA_Wildcats-White Posted - 12/01/2017 : 14:07:09
Rashad Brown from the Tigers organization. He lives in Atlanta and does lessons.
in_the_know Posted - 12/01/2017 : 12:34:03
There's actually quite a bit to learn. At 8u, not so much more than CaCo's recommendation, but as you get older . . . Jumps, read, angles, double cuts, communication, footwork, throwing, etc., etc., are all different beasts that differ from playing an IF position.

I'd recommend that you reach out to an organization such as 643 and get with one of the coaches that played MiLB OF or College OF and can get you some sessions on specific OF work and drills. I know they have coaches with that resume. Possibly check with Homeplate organization as well. Team Elite may also be able to get you setup with some good instruction. This gives you a Cobb area and a North and South OTP option to consider.
CaCO3Girl Posted - 12/01/2017 : 08:20:50
I'm not sure what there is to coach....hit him a million balls and have him practice which paths work best for him? Then throw in as fast and accurate as he can?

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