Posts Tagged ‘Swing’
Softball Hitting Drills for a Great Swing NEW
- Fastpitch Sofball Hitting Drills
- Batting Drills
- Bunting
- Slapping
Product Description
This Hitting Drills manual is brand new and is packed with over 75 great hitting drills designed to improve all aspects of the swing for beginning, intermediate and advanced hitters.
This manual is packed with photos and diagrams so you not only read about the Purpose and Setup for each drill but you can read and see just how each drill works. Energize your practices; improve your hitters and most of all score more runs with this brand new Hitting Drills manual only from Softball Excellence!
Tables of Contents
Organized by category this new Hitting Drills manual gives you over 75 drills to help your hitters improve any of the following parts of their swing:
Strength & Conditioning
Stance
Load/Negative Mov… More >>
Leah O’Brien-Amico/Derek Jeter Hit-A-Way Softball Target Swing Trainer
- Great one-on-one coaching tool
- Great training tool for warm-up swings before games and practice
- Practice 10-15 swings a day, 3 days a week, and see immediate improvements in performance
- 58 inches long
Product Description
Target Swing Trainer Horizontal hitter design gives the hitter correct feedback on each swing. Both the batter and the holder can tell instantly on contact whether the hit was a grounder, line drive or fly ball. Effective for drills to increase power and control bat speed. Drills included in instructions…. More >>
Leah O’Brien-Amico/Derek Jeter Hit-A-Way Softball Target Swing Trainer
Little League Baseball Bats – Make Your Kid Swing Like A Pro
Different leagues have different standards for baseball bats. Professional, adult leagues (the ones that hope to make it to the World Series) require classic, wooden baseball bats. But Amateur leagues allow for lighter, more powerful metal bats. When it comes down to equipping your child with the best bat they can possibly get, it takes more than just buying him any ordinary bat.
Furthermore, in high school leagues, baseball bats must be more than 67 millimeters in diameter, so it’s only suiting that the requirements for Little League baseball bats are just as stringent! This is no surprise considering the difference in size between adolescents, adults and children. The following requirements are typical and good to know if your son or daughter is thinking about joining a league and baseball bat shopping might be on the horizon.
Little League baseball bats cannot be more than 33 inches long or have a barrel diameter of more than 2 ΒΌ inches. Also, they must be taped around the handle. To understand how much a bat weighs, look at the negative number that it is associated with. If a baseball bat is 30 inches long and its number rating is -10, that means the bat weighs 20 ounces. Lighter Little League baseball bats are more powerful than heavier ones (and also will hurt a child a lot less if it accidentally hits them in the head, which is a good thing since there is no crying in baseball!), but they are also more expensive. The surefire way to zero in on the perfect little League Baseball bat for your child is to make some test swings before uou head to the counter.
Jeremy Tang likes to swing his baseball bat till the cows come home. Read more information about the subject by taking a peek at his pieces on youth baseball bats and little league baseball bats.

