Live hitting in a cage
These stations can be done with a couple or three people around the cage so supervision is very close at hand.
And as long as you have access to a batting cage, one of the things I would suggest is to divide it into two or three sections with divider nets and do front soft toss from behind a screen.
I would also suggest that you create stations that teach defensive drills in very isolated parts. What I mean by that is that the player only fields ground balls, catches fly balls, or throws. Make each station independent of the others and have a bucket next to the kid so he can put the ball in it after he catches a grounder or fly ball.
Baserunning is always a good opening and closing drill for this age group as they love to run. This gives you a chance to teach them certain situations and keep them moving. You can do it individually or as a group. I always teach baserunning by hitting a ball so they learn when to run by reacting to the ball, as opposed to what I say. You or another coach must be the one that hits the ball and be in control. This works really well if you have three people: one to hit the ball, one to field the ball, and one to be a baserunner that the other kids can imitate.
At Baseball Tips, we have three items that actually would be of value to your situation. The 59 Minute Baseball Practice DVD and Backyard Baseball Drills DVD were both made to specifically target the young player and keep them moving and involved with very simple and ordinary drills, but done in a way that keeps everybody busy. The other useful resource is a book and CD called A Youth Baseball Coaches Tool Kit. All three are exceptional tools for you to be able to use with the younger set in a group environment.
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Coach Arnald Swift is the Director of Customer Relations at Baseball Tips. He joined the staff in 2003 after retiring from the high school coaching ranks in Colorado. If you have a question you'd like Coach Swift to answer, send an e-mail to baseballtips@gmail.com.
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