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by Don Marsh
This may
not be much of a surprise to you, since I bet everyone from your
parents to your teacher to your baseball coach tells you this
all the time: The way to get better at something is to practice
it. A lot.
But practicing things in baseball might be a little different
from practicing other things, like doing your homework. For one,
you get to do it outdoors. For another, with baseball,
practicing just one thing and one thing only helps you remember
the rest of what you need to know.
Take fielding a ground ball,
for example. We've already discussed the way to set up
to field a grounder (remember how to form your "Triangle?"
See photo above, with the player's feet and hands forming
the triangle), but sometimes, as you may have found out
already, even when you do that, the ball has a way of
getting under your glove.
But not if you practice getting your glove lower than the ball.
The reason keeping your glove lower than the ball as it
approaches is a good thing to remember, is that there's always
going to be a natural tendency to raise your hands when it comes
near. If your glove is at the same level with the ball, chances
are pretty good that when you do raise your hands in that
natural reflex motion, the ball's going to keep on going
underneath. Almost every time you see a big leaguer make an
error on a ground ball in front of them it's because he didn't
keep his hands low enough as the ball was bouncing toward him.
Another good reason to practice something as simple as keeping
your glove lower than the ball is that, when you're really out
there playing the infield, repeating it to yourself will be a
great way to also remember the other things you've already
learned.
Remembering your "Triangle"
and everything else we've talked about prepares you for
the ground ball as it comes, but keeping your glove lower
than the ball helps make sure you catch it when it does.

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