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Written
by Marty Schupak
Producer of the Backyard
Baseball Drills
The sporting goods industry is a multi-billion
dollar business, and the cost of equipment can be ridiculously
expensive. Every family cannot afford the latest and greatest
products (and gimmicks). But the old saying that the best things
in life are free, can also hold true in sports. Before you go
out and spend hundreds of dollars on a deluxe glove or equipment
to help your kids learn a level swing, you should look around
your house and see what you can create, cheaply, that will help
your kids improve their skills--and still have fun.
When
I was a kid growing up, some of my best memories were throwing
around the baseball with my older brother in our backyard. Using
our imaginations, we used almost every tree and rock in our yard
to create fantasy sports and games.
One
of our favorite games was something we called error. One of us
would throw a tennis ball on the roof of our house--within an
imaginary twenty foot boundary--and the other would have to catch
the ball before it hit the ground. We spent endless hours playing
this game. Other then some yelling from my parents (something
about too many balls being stuck in the gutter), this game still
sticks in my mind as providing some of the most fun in my childhood.
Rushing
forward about twenty five years, I found myself with my kids creating
some similar games in our backyard (with my own gutter lurking
nearby). Most combined fun with affordability . We made use of
almost every part of our property.
Instead
of spending over a hundred dollars on a hitting net, we put together
a comparable apparatus using a 10X14 plastic tarp along with some
bicycle hooks, rope and two convenient trees. And we had fun putting
it up. The boys would hit balls into the tarp as I did my best
impression of a big league hitting coach giving them tips.
Drills
such as hitting off the batting tee and soft toss worked out great,
too, with the tarp as backstop, but wacky games were also plentiful.
We created a game right on the tarp, putting two squares, one
inside the other made out of duct tape. This game we called toss
ball home run derby. Doing the soft toss drill against the tarp,
a ball hit inside the small square would be a home run. A ball
hit inside the large square would be a single. Everything else
was an out. Three outs a team. This game combined skill building
and having fun.
But
I'd been inventing games for years. One of the first things I
did with both my sons as soon as they were old enough to hold
a bat, was to get one of those large red plastic whiffle bats.
I then bought a bottle of soap bubbles that all kids love. I would
blow the bubbles and have my son hit them with the big red bat.
We would run up and down the backyard as he chased the bubbles
down and tried to break them. I encouraged him to keep both hands
on the bat as he swung but if he didn't, so what--he was having
fun.
Another
game my kids loved when they got a little older was called the
dive game. I would throw ground balls to either their left or
right side, and they would have to dive in front of the ball and
stop it. I tried teaching them that the goal was to just stop
the ball like a hockey or soccer goalie--and not necessarily catch
it. But it was amazing how much effort they put into trying to
catch the ball. Aside from explaining the grass stains to their
mother, this game was a real hit with them and I even caught them
playing it without me a few times which made me feel great.
Another
favorite involved a few tennis balls, a tennis racquet and a cinder
block. Laying the cinder block flat, we created a simple version
of Home Run Derby. Standing next to one of my kids as he held
the tennis racquet ready to swing it like a bat, I would bounce
the ball high off the cinder block. With the ball on the way down,
he would time it and hit it as far as he could. Both my kids could
not get enough of this game. We were lucky that our backyard was
fairly large but some of the tennis balls did travel into our
neighbors yard. The real beauty of this game is that hitting a
tennis ball with a tennis racquet almost guarantees success for
the fledgling ballplayer.
Families
who live in the inner city can also make use of a lot of what's
around them. I remember as a child going to visit my grandparents
in Brooklyn, New York. My uncle would take my brothers and me
to the back of the building and play numerous games off the huge
concrete wall. Toss ball home run derby can be played off a wall,
as well as a tarp, with the two squares made out of chalk.
Another
game which we played, that was made popular just after World War
2, was called stoop ball. In this game we would throw a ball off
the stoop (or concrete steps) and see if the other team would
catch it before it bounced on the ground. One bounce would be
a single, two bounces a double and so on. Inner city kids who
have limited room but love sports can still find just enough to
play for hours on end.
Baseball
need not cost a fortune. And it doesn't have to be all boring
instruction, whether it is on a practice field with twelve kids.
or in your own backyard with just you and your son or daughter.
Keep it cheap, if you can, and keep it fun.
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