As a young coach who grew up playing baseball at a decent level and now I coach youth baseball . But after some years away from the game I was rusty on all these different situations and I'm finding your channel great for refreshing all these different situational plays , and just a tremendous amount of knowledge in your videos useful for someone wanting to learn coaching or a player wanting to learn how to be better and more elite !!
Amazing job of explaining basic cutoffs and how important they are to limiting runs. Every youth player regardless of position needs to watch this! Great job, Rizz!!!
This is really helpful and intuitive! I learned today that as a 1B I need to fake the cuts when OFs are throwing to the plate. This is really great for understanding the approach to how deep to set up for the cut. I appreciate you!
I'm glad you emphasized (twice!) that the outfielders should always throw to their TARGET, not the cutoff man. If the throw is to the plate, the CATCHER is the target! If the throw is to 3rd, then the third baseman is the target. If the cutoff man is positioned correctly and the throw has the proper trajectory, the throw will be catchable by the cutoff man and prevent other runners from advancing farther. This is often taught incorrectly as outfielders are often (incorrectly) taught to, "Throw it to the cutoff man!" What if the cutoff man is not aligned properly? Are you going to throw it to him? NO! This is very basic baseball. You always focus on your intended target. The outfielder focuses on the *catcher* for the same reason the pitcher does when he pitches.
Remember the difference between a relay man and a cutoff man. You throw TO the relay man because you don't know which base the relay man will throw to. The cutoff man is for a specific base, you're throwing to that base.
Thank you for this great video. The guidance on "how deep" cutoff man should position, faking a cut/throw against other runners, is awesome. I had to watch this video several times, taking down notes, to fully understand all the if-then scenarios. And they make a lot of sense. My son currently plays in 12U. The team still cycles through all the kids through almost all positions in the field. Not doing dedicated positions yet. The team hasn't taught these finer details of if-then like this video describes. And I can't imagine they teach it, unless most of the infielders are playing in dedicated positions. They way they currently handle it, is simply for the two mid-IF's to move towards the ball. The first one finding an empty 2B is the one covering it; the other guy becomes a CO for the throw to LR+2. But I definitely see how such a CO becomes ineffective in faking and keeping the batter/runner on 1st base, if there was already a runner on 1st, hit goes to CF or RF, and OF's throw is to 3rd.
Thanks for the feedback! The players in our organization tend to play multiple positions as well, so the challenges you describe concerning the difficulties of players learning these basic cutoffs, is definitely relative. My experience is that, at that age group, the middle infielders tend to grasp it a little better, because they are used to being the cutoff of most plays. The 1st and 3rd basemen tend to be the biggest challenge in getting them to the point that with a runner on 2nd they anticipate being the cutoff for a play at the plate. Getting a young 1st or 3rd basemen to the point they can remember, and then successfully run a cutoff to the plate is a big stepping stone. Doesn’t happen overnight, and can be frustrating for sure, but that should be the goal of travel, youth baseball. Learning to play the game the right way is so much more important than a teams record. Thanks again for the feedback, and good luck!
The 4:25 or so play where 3rd is cutoff for home needs further discussion. The catcher lines up on the third baseman so the throw is in line. This nearly puts him out of position to make the play at home. Incredible athleticism saves the play. In an ideal world 3B should have lined up a little more towards the 3B line to get the catcher in position.
Ok, say that there’s a runner on second, and a single to center field and the cf throws the ball to the first baseman. My question is when should the first baseman preform the deak. Like, how close should the ball be away from him? Sorry if that didn’t make any sense. Anyway great video.
Hi, nice video, just a question: don't you think that, at youth and lower level, as the runner is running at home from second, it would be better the 2b is a bridge (in particular with the hit in the alleys) instead checking the 1st base?! Thanks in advance
Great question. The 2 reasons a cutoff typically cuts the ball is 1) If the throw is off line. 2) If the player at the base tells him to cut it. For example, lets say there is a base hit to left field and the third baseman gets lined up correctly as the cutoff, and the throw from the left fielder is a step or 2 towards the pitchers mound, then the cutoff should automatically cut the ball because the throw will pull the catcher off the plate. If it is a good throw, then the cutoff should just be listening to the catcher. I teach our catchers to (after he has helped to line up the third baseman properly) to only yell if he wants the ball cut, and he should only yell "cut 1, cut 2, cut 3, cut 4 (*rarely), or cut hold". That way all the third baseman has to do is listens for the catchers voice, and if he hears it he is cutting the ball. A lot of catchers will yell stuff like "let it go", but now you're asking your third baseman to try and handle an outfield throw while at the same time process exactly what the catcher is saying, and especially for the younger kids, this can be a bit too much information at one. To go back to *, occasionally, the throw will be off line, but the catcher may determine that there is still a play at the play, and that would be one of the few times the catcher will yell "cut 4". A perfect example would be this play from the World series a couple years ago ruclips.net/video/qHvHCj1nPec/видео.html Hope that helps, thanks again for the great question, that is something I should have covered in the video.
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Excellent! I coach my son's rec teams, and he's now at the pony level. I've never heard that explained until now, and I appreciate it. One more question if I may. On the throw to home, why is the third baseman the cutoff and not the shortstop. In my mind, it seems easier for the shortstop. But there must be some reason why it's done that way. Thanks again!
Mainly because as arm strengths increase, the cutoff will need to get more depth (closer to the catcher) to place himself at that correct “head height” of the throw. At younger ages this depth is closer to the infield dirt, so as you suggested, the shortstop could easily get there, but since that’ll not be the case as kids get older, we might as well teach the correct way now so they don’t need to re-learn it later.
This is the stuff that people don’t understand about baseball including myself. The mental and defensive aspects of the game. People say, “why is he faking the catch, it will never get the runner.” That’s not the point, it’s to prevent the runner from advancing into the next base. Say we have a runner on 2nd and the batter rips a blooper to right field easy enough for the runner to score. There’s nothing you can do to stop him from scoring, now the idea is to prevent the runner from advancing. First basemen does the “fake out” and is in a good position where it looks like he could cut the ball off. Batter doesn’t advance into scoring position and it keeps the double play and force play active and it saves possibly saves a run from scoring. My favorite play was the Freddie Freeman cutoff throw. It’s quite possible no one told him to cutoff of the throw, but his head was in the game trying to get an out wherever he could. Now, if that runner had advanced, it would have made it easier for the next batter to drive the runner in. Instead, he was tagged out and Possibly Saved a run from being scored and the saved the pitcher from throwing more pitches. Amazing video and it has given me a deeper understanding of baseball that I can hopefully teach to young ballplayers. Thank you so much❤
Would have liked to have seen the scenario with a runner on 1st base and a sure double to either gap or over CF head. Do you have your 1st baseman trail the batter/runner to 2nd base or do you have the 1st baseman be the cutoff man at home plate?
I have a second video on cutoffs called “double cuts” where I cover some of this. To answer your specific question about the 1st baseman’s role on doubles, at the college level and higher, most teams have him trail the runner into second base. Some teams have him remain as the cutoff though. Personally, at the youth level, I am leaning more towards keeping the first baseman as a cutoff for a couple reasons. -One being that middle infielders arms aren’t overly strong yet. -The second being to simplify the first baseman’s role in relays and cutoffs, since even at the upper ages of travel ball (15u-17u) very few players entering our program have been taught how to run proper cutoffs, so they have a lot being thrown at them. So long answer short, I don’t know that there is a right or wrong way to run the first basemen’s roll, it’s more team/coach preference. With that said, I personally have the higher baseball IQ guys in our Canes program trail the base runner on doubles down the line, but on doubles gap to gap, I have them run their traditional cutoff for a possible play at the plate (if there was a runner on first). Hope this made sense. Thanks for the comment!
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Yes, very much makes sense. I agree with your breakdown. In bigger ballparks with deeper gaps and a middle infielder has a longer throw to the plate, seems to me having the 1st baseman as a cutoff for home is better utilization than trailing the runner to 2nd base. If the 2nd baseman or SS throw is off line any at all, you not only don't have a play at the plate, you don't have the ability to relay a throw to plate or redirect ball to 3rd or even 2nd base behind the runner..... there should be an outfielder available to cover 2nd base regardless of which gap the ball is hit, right? Anyway, a debate came up among some coaches and I argued you were kinda wasting the 1st baseman as a trail man in that situation since an outfielder could cover 2b. What's more important.... the chance to relay an offline throw from a middle infielder for a play at home plate or redirect an offline throw to 3rd base, or the catcher trying to throw behind the batter/runner at 2nd base if he gets caught too far off bag? Thanks for getting back to me, really appreciated you sharing your thoughts on that particular play.
Thanks! Unfortunately it has been years since I’ve read a baseball book, so the only one I can recommend is the classic “the science of hitting” by Ted Williams.
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Double Play Videos, Who takes the bag on throw to 2nd from C, Lead off and steal videos, pick off moves to all 3 bags, Balk videos, bunt coverages, when to shift infield and outfield, Holding a runner and throwing to 1st, fielder's choice, etc... I can think of a ton of topics.
Great point and is actually covered at the end of my "Doubles Cut" video. I show where the SS should be on a double to right field at the higher levels (college/pros), and what he's should be looking for. Jeter did all of that perfectly, and when he read the bad throw, being the hall of fame athlete he is, made an amazing play look easy.
Sorry for the delayed response. It’s age and “baseball IQ” dependent obviously, but my typical approach is to start with a “slow motion” situation drill where we set a defense up along with a base runner, then everyone walks through a typical play, including the base runner. First goal is to set up in perfect positioning. Once the team can achieve that, then speed it up. Once the team is more comfortable, I run a drill I call “4 numbers”. I use this drill to try and stress out the defense like an actual game tends too. It’s a simple drill. Set a defense up, no base runners, and the coach yells out 4 numbers, then fungos a ball. For example: I might yell “2342”, then fungo a base hit to left field. Left fielder is throwing to 2nd base (SS is the cutoff), 2nd baseman receives the throw, swipe tags an imaginary runner, then fires the ball to 3rd base. 3rd baseman swipe tags an imaginary runner then fires the ball to the catcher, who tags and then throws to 2nd base. Make sure outfielders are correctly backing up the various throws. This forces the kids to process a lot of information while still trying to react quickly, as well as “handle the baseball” (basically errorless throwing and catching). “2134” and a ground ball to shortstop turns into a double play turn for middle, with the first baseman throwing across to a tag play at 3rd, and then the 3rd baseman throwing home. Again, although the ball never leaves the infield, the outfielders and pitcher should be getting into proper backup positions, so everyone on the field is engaged. With younger kids I yell the 4 numbers and then give them a couple seconds before putting the ball into play. Eventually speeding it up. Hope that makes sense, and is helpful.
Thanks for the video. What are the advantages of using the schemes you describe for cuts to 3B and home over just using the scheme for no runners (i.e. SS is cut for balls hit on 1B-side of field and SS is cut for balls hit on the 3B-side) in all situations? I’d be curious to hear your thoughts as it applies to all levels. The essence of my question comes from coaching 10U though. I put a lot of value on simplicity at that age. Also, there are arm strength considerations that would lead me to coach the schemes you describe differently at the 10U level (i.e. I think you are better off cutting the throw to home at 10U, so you would want the cut-off man positioned differently).
The cut off is typically there to cut “off line” throws, or redirect the baseball to a different base. And yes, occasionally the “cutoff” can turn into the “relay”. Thanks for the question, hopefully this answered it.
You might need to simplify it a little bit, but that’s typically the age we start implementing cutoffs in our org. Obviously it takes a lot of reps and patience before they totally “get” it, but it’s a great time to create a good foundation
It sounds like you have game commentary in the background of some of (e.g. 5:40), and it kind of sounds like this goes through the entire video. Especially in these parts where it's just you describing something and the audience trying to listen, that commentary is really desitracting, maybe consider removing that?
Let's say there's nobody on base and the batter hits a gapper. The shortstop or second baseman does *not* go out to perform the roll of "cutoff" man. What is the advantage to cutting off a ball while standing in the shallow outfield? Mostly, he's going out in the event the ball gets *by* the outfielder. In that case, he is now ready to play the role of RELAY man because of the great distance the ball will now have to go to get back into the infield. Sure, sometimes the left fielder tosses the ball to the shortstop, but that's not so much a "cutoff" as it is just a simple throw to get the ball back into the infield. It's obvious to everybody that the batter is NOT going to try and stretch a routine single into a double, so there's no reason to launch the ball from left field all the way to 2nd base. But, let's say a batter who has hit a routine single to left field foolishly tries to stretch that into a double. What's the role of the shortstop on this play? Nothing, really. He aligns himself with the left fielder's throw, but the expectation is that the left fielder is throwing it to the second baseman at the bag. I can't think of any reason for that ball to be cutoff UNLESS the throw is very, very much off target.
People are coming to this at different points in their lives, and possibly from positions they have never played before. No need to be a jerk on a really helpful video.
Fascinating presentation with no flash - just the facts! Appreciated seeing Freddy Freeman and Kevin Kiermaier doing what they do so well.
Thanks! I think I sort of give away that I'm a Braves fan.
As a young coach who grew up playing baseball at a decent level and now I coach youth baseball . But after some years away from the game I was rusty on all these different situations and I'm finding your channel great for refreshing all these different situational plays , and just a tremendous amount of knowledge in your videos useful for someone wanting to learn coaching or a player wanting to learn how to be better and more elite !!
It took me 3 years to find the BEST VIDEO on explaining basic cutoffs.
Amazing job of explaining basic cutoffs and how important they are to limiting runs. Every youth player regardless of position needs to watch this! Great job, Rizz!!!
Fantastic tutorial! Really phenomenal job of analyzing and breaking down cuts and relays all the way to the most granular details.
Thank you!
I love it
This is really helpful and intuitive! I learned today that as a 1B I need to fake the cuts when OFs are throwing to the plate. This is really great for understanding the approach to how deep to set up for the cut. I appreciate you!
And people think baseball is boring. Every pitch has a meaning to everyone on the field and maybe even in the dugouts. ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I'm glad you emphasized (twice!) that the outfielders should always throw to their TARGET, not the cutoff man. If the throw is to the plate, the CATCHER is the target! If the throw is to 3rd, then the third baseman is the target. If the cutoff man is positioned correctly and the throw has the proper trajectory, the throw will be catchable by the cutoff man and prevent other runners from advancing farther. This is often taught incorrectly as outfielders are often (incorrectly) taught to, "Throw it to the cutoff man!" What if the cutoff man is not aligned properly? Are you going to throw it to him? NO! This is very basic baseball. You always focus on your intended target. The outfielder focuses on the *catcher* for the same reason the pitcher does when he pitches.
Remember the difference between a relay man and a cutoff man. You throw TO the relay man because you don't know which base the relay man will throw to. The cutoff man is for a specific base, you're throwing to that base.
I’m starting to learn about beisebol, it’s great to found a video and a comment section that can provide soo much useful information.
Great video. I just got named head varsity coach and this will definitely be added to my chalk talk series.
That is awesome!
Very informative and condensed video. This is what separates great teams from good teams.
Thank you for this great video.
The guidance on "how deep" cutoff man should position, faking a cut/throw against other runners, is awesome.
I had to watch this video several times, taking down notes, to fully understand all the if-then scenarios. And they make a lot of sense.
My son currently plays in 12U. The team still cycles through all the kids through almost all positions in the field. Not doing dedicated positions yet.
The team hasn't taught these finer details of if-then like this video describes. And I can't imagine they teach it, unless most of the infielders are playing in dedicated positions.
They way they currently handle it, is simply for the two mid-IF's to move towards the ball. The first one finding an empty 2B is the one covering it; the other guy becomes a CO for the throw to LR+2.
But I definitely see how such a CO becomes ineffective in faking and keeping the batter/runner on 1st base, if there was already a runner on 1st, hit goes to CF or RF, and OF's throw is to 3rd.
Thanks for the feedback!
The players in our organization tend to play multiple positions as well, so the challenges you describe concerning the difficulties of players learning these basic cutoffs, is definitely relative. My experience is that, at that age group, the middle infielders tend to grasp it a little better, because they are used to being the cutoff of most plays. The 1st and 3rd basemen tend to be the biggest challenge in getting them to the point that with a runner on 2nd they anticipate being the cutoff for a play at the plate.
Getting a young 1st or 3rd basemen to the point they can remember, and then successfully run a cutoff to the plate is a big stepping stone. Doesn’t happen overnight, and can be frustrating for sure, but that should be the goal of travel, youth baseball. Learning to play the game the right way is so much more important than a teams record.
Thanks again for the feedback, and good luck!
Really Great video! Would have also liked discussion of pitcher responsibilities in these scenarios. Thank yoU!
I’ve shared it with over ten people already. Thanks!
The 4:25 or so play where 3rd is cutoff for home needs further discussion. The catcher lines up on the third baseman so the throw is in line. This nearly puts him out of position to make the play at home. Incredible athleticism saves the play. In an ideal world 3B should have lined up a little more towards the 3B line to get the catcher in position.
can u do video just focusing on 1st base cutoffs and relays that would reallly really help, me atm
Ok, say that there’s a runner on second, and a single to center field and the cf throws the ball to the first baseman. My question is when should the first baseman preform the deak. Like, how close should the ball be away from him?
Sorry if that didn’t make any sense.
Anyway great video.
Hi, nice video, just a question: don't you think that, at youth and lower level, as the runner is running at home from second, it would be better the 2b is a bridge (in particular with the hit in the alleys) instead checking the 1st base?! Thanks in advance
Coach rizz was ahead of his time
The true first rizzard
He rizzed us up
Great video. How does the cutoff man know whether to cut off the throw or let it go past him?
Great question. The 2 reasons a cutoff typically cuts the ball is 1) If the throw is off line. 2) If the player at the base tells him to cut it. For example, lets say there is a base hit to left field and the third baseman gets lined up correctly as the cutoff, and the throw from the left fielder is a step or 2 towards the pitchers mound, then the cutoff should automatically cut the ball because the throw will pull the catcher off the plate. If it is a good throw, then the cutoff should just be listening to the catcher. I teach our catchers to (after he has helped to line up the third baseman properly) to only yell if he wants the ball cut, and he should only yell "cut 1, cut 2, cut 3, cut 4 (*rarely), or cut hold". That way all the third baseman has to do is listens for the catchers voice, and if he hears it he is cutting the ball. A lot of catchers will yell stuff like "let it go", but now you're asking your third baseman to try and handle an outfield throw while at the same time process exactly what the catcher is saying, and especially for the younger kids, this can be a bit too much information at one. To go back to *, occasionally, the throw will be off line, but the catcher may determine that there is still a play at the play, and that would be one of the few times the catcher will yell "cut 4". A perfect example would be this play from the World series a couple years ago ruclips.net/video/qHvHCj1nPec/видео.html
Hope that helps, thanks again for the great question, that is something I should have covered in the video.
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Excellent! I coach my son's rec teams, and he's now at the pony level. I've never heard that explained until now, and I appreciate it. One more question if I may. On the throw to home, why is the third baseman the cutoff and not the shortstop. In my mind, it seems easier for the shortstop. But there must be some reason why it's done that way. Thanks again!
Mainly because as arm strengths increase, the cutoff will need to get more depth (closer to the catcher) to place himself at that correct “head height” of the throw. At younger ages this depth is closer to the infield dirt, so as you suggested, the shortstop could easily get there, but since that’ll not be the case as kids get older, we might as well teach the correct way now so they don’t need to re-learn it later.
This is the stuff that people don’t understand about baseball including myself. The mental and defensive aspects of the game. People say, “why is he faking the catch, it will never get the runner.” That’s not the point, it’s to prevent the runner from advancing into the next base.
Say we have a runner on 2nd and the batter rips a blooper to right field easy enough for the runner to score. There’s nothing you can do to stop him from scoring, now the idea is to prevent the runner from advancing. First basemen does the “fake out” and is in a good position where it looks like he could cut the ball off. Batter doesn’t advance into scoring position and it keeps the double play and force play active and it saves possibly saves a run from scoring.
My favorite play was the Freddie Freeman cutoff throw.
It’s quite possible no one told him to cutoff of the throw, but his head was in the game trying to get an out wherever he could. Now, if that runner had advanced, it would have made it easier for the next batter to drive the runner in. Instead, he was tagged out and Possibly Saved a run from being scored and the saved the pitcher from throwing more pitches.
Amazing video and it has given me a deeper understanding of baseball that I can hopefully teach to young ballplayers.
Thank you so much❤
Lol he predicted modern humour with kids 'Coach Rizz'
Wish they'd had RUclips when i was a kid.
You and men both! lol Thanks for the comment
Came here from reddit!
Great video! Breaks it down well.
Great explanations. I just Love Yadi!!!!!
Would have liked to have seen the scenario with a runner on 1st base and a sure double to either gap or over CF head. Do you have your 1st baseman trail the batter/runner to 2nd base or do you have the 1st baseman be the cutoff man at home plate?
I have a second video on cutoffs called “double cuts” where I cover some of this.
To answer your specific question about the 1st baseman’s role on doubles, at the college level and higher, most teams have him trail the runner into second base. Some teams have him remain as the cutoff though. Personally, at the youth level, I am leaning more towards keeping the first baseman as a cutoff for a couple reasons.
-One being that middle infielders arms aren’t overly strong yet.
-The second being to simplify the first baseman’s role in relays and cutoffs, since even at the upper ages of travel ball (15u-17u) very few players entering our program have been taught how to run proper cutoffs, so they have a lot being thrown at them.
So long answer short, I don’t know that there is a right or wrong way to run the first basemen’s roll, it’s more team/coach preference.
With that said, I personally have the higher baseball IQ guys in our Canes program trail the base runner on doubles down the line, but on doubles gap to gap, I have them run their traditional cutoff for a possible play at the plate (if there was a runner on first).
Hope this made sense.
Thanks for the comment!
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Yes, very much makes sense. I agree with your breakdown. In bigger ballparks with deeper gaps and a middle infielder has a longer throw to the plate, seems to me having the 1st baseman as a cutoff for home is better utilization than trailing the runner to 2nd base.
If the 2nd baseman or SS throw is off line any at all, you not only don't have a play at the plate, you don't have the ability to relay a throw to plate or redirect ball to 3rd or even 2nd base behind the runner..... there should be an outfielder available to cover 2nd base regardless of which gap the ball is hit, right?
Anyway, a debate came up among some coaches and I argued you were kinda wasting the 1st baseman as a trail man in that situation since an outfielder could cover 2b.
What's more important.... the chance to relay an offline throw from a middle infielder for a play at home plate or redirect an offline throw to 3rd base, or the catcher trying to throw behind the batter/runner at 2nd base if he gets caught too far off bag?
Thanks for getting back to me, really appreciated you sharing your thoughts on that particular play.
This video is amazing!! I am new to Elite youth baseball. Can you recommend a book that my 14 year old boy can read before bed?
Thanks! Unfortunately it has been years since I’ve read a baseball book, so the only one I can recommend is the classic “the science of hitting” by Ted Williams.
This is excellent. Please make more content.
Thank you!
I am working on more videos,. I’d also welcome recommendations on subjects viewers such as yourself would like to see covered.
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 Double Play Videos, Who takes the bag on throw to 2nd from C, Lead off and steal videos, pick off moves to all 3 bags, Balk videos, bunt coverages, when to shift infield and outfield, Holding a runner and throwing to 1st, fielder's choice, etc... I can think of a ton of topics.
Great explanation. Any chance of a follow-up video showing the Derek Jeter flip to the plate out and how that cut off play broke down?
Great point and is actually covered at the end of my "Doubles Cut" video. I show where the SS should be on a double to right field at the higher levels (college/pros), and what he's should be looking for. Jeter did all of that perfectly, and when he read the bad throw, being the hall of fame athlete he is, made an amazing play look easy.
Thanks! I just watched it. I never knew there was a difference between cut off plays.
great information
This is fantastic. What steps would you go through to coach this to a team for the first time.
Sorry for the delayed response.
It’s age and “baseball IQ” dependent obviously, but my typical approach is to start with a “slow motion” situation drill where we set a defense up along with a base runner, then everyone walks through a typical play, including the base runner.
First goal is to set up in perfect positioning. Once the team can achieve that, then speed it up.
Once the team is more comfortable, I run a drill I call “4 numbers”. I use this drill to try and stress out the defense like an actual game tends too.
It’s a simple drill. Set a defense up, no base runners, and the coach yells out 4 numbers, then fungos a ball.
For example: I might yell “2342”, then fungo a base hit to left field. Left fielder is throwing to 2nd base (SS is the cutoff), 2nd baseman receives the throw, swipe tags an imaginary runner, then fires the ball to 3rd base. 3rd baseman swipe tags an imaginary runner then fires the ball to the catcher, who tags and then throws to 2nd base.
Make sure outfielders are correctly backing up the various throws. This forces the kids to process a lot of information while still trying to react quickly, as well as “handle the baseball” (basically errorless throwing and catching).
“2134” and a ground ball to shortstop turns into a double play turn for middle, with the first baseman throwing across to a tag play at 3rd, and then the 3rd baseman throwing home. Again, although the ball never leaves the infield, the outfielders and pitcher should be getting into proper backup positions, so everyone on the field is engaged.
With younger kids I yell the 4 numbers and then give them a couple seconds before putting the ball into play. Eventually speeding it up.
Hope that makes sense, and is helpful.
Thanks for the video. What are the advantages of using the schemes you describe for cuts to 3B and home over just using the scheme for no runners (i.e. SS is cut for balls hit on 1B-side of field and SS is cut for balls hit on the 3B-side) in all situations? I’d be curious to hear your thoughts as it applies to all levels.
The essence of my question comes from coaching 10U though. I put a lot of value on simplicity at that age. Also, there are arm strength considerations that would lead me to coach the schemes you describe differently at the 10U level (i.e. I think you are better off cutting the throw to home at 10U, so you would want the cut-off man positioned differently).
what is the diference between cut off y assit man? could be the same in somes cases?
The cut off is typically there to cut “off line” throws, or redirect the baseball to a different base. And yes, occasionally the “cutoff” can turn into the “relay”. Thanks for the question, hopefully this answered it.
Very interesting. Thanks
What’s the difference between a cutoff and a relay?
Great video!!
Excellent video!
Thank you very much!
Can first year kid pitch mostly 9 year olds get this or does it need even more simplification.
You might need to simplify it a little bit, but that’s typically the age we start implementing cutoffs in our org.
Obviously it takes a lot of reps and patience before they totally “get” it, but it’s a great time to create a good foundation
"Coach Rizz"
awesome content
This is great. Ready for my game now 😎.
ayy
@@shoppersville7328 bro i don’t even remember commenting this i was younger then lol
Good video!
Thanks!
Nice video 👍
good run down. thanks
Thanks for explaining
It sounds like you have game commentary in the background of some of (e.g. 5:40), and it kind of sounds like this goes through the entire video. Especially in these parts where it's just you describing something and the audience trying to listen, that commentary is really desitracting, maybe consider removing that?
im watching this before a baseball game
Im watching this again
and again
and again again
Thank you!!
You're welcome!
Lol I was trying to figure out where on my computer the NESN booth audio was coming from
Sorry about that. Still trying to figure out this whole editing aspect
Ya hi, I’m new to your channel, and I’m going to need you to step your game up please, cause your videos are 🔥 (jk thank you) Neeeeed more!
lol thanks, I have a couple new videos I’m working on and hope to upload soon-ish.
@@eliteyouthbaseball2885 awesome can’t wait! Thank you
well done!
Nice video
I think this shows that the pros very rarely throw through the cut man or relay man. Just throw to the target base
Cool
This but with John Gruden narrating please
lol if you can get him on board with that I’m in!
If you’re from STIX 11u baseball reply here⬇️
Let's say there's nobody on base and the batter hits a gapper. The shortstop or second baseman does *not* go out to perform the roll of "cutoff" man. What is the advantage to cutting off a ball while standing in the shallow outfield? Mostly, he's going out in the event the ball gets *by* the outfielder. In that case, he is now ready to play the role of RELAY man because of the great distance the ball will now have to go to get back into the infield.
Sure, sometimes the left fielder tosses the ball to the shortstop, but that's not so much a "cutoff" as it is just a simple throw to get the ball back into the infield. It's obvious to everybody that the batter is NOT going to try and stretch a routine single into a double, so there's no reason to launch the ball from left field all the way to 2nd base. But, let's say a batter who has hit a routine single to left field foolishly tries to stretch that into a double. What's the role of the shortstop on this play? Nothing, really. He aligns himself with the left fielder's throw, but the expectation is that the left fielder is throwing it to the second baseman at the bag. I can't think of any reason for that ball to be cutoff UNLESS the throw is very, very much off target.
coach rizz got the rizz
I gave the name “Rizz” it’s current status! lol
4:25 no
Was up zoom
Everyone should already know this
People are coming to this at different points in their lives, and possibly from positions they have never played before. No need to be a jerk on a really helpful video.
@@deepzone31 good point I’ve recently got switched from outfield to second base
Don't understand atoll