The
new patent pending training aid for pitchers and catchers emphasizes what
the best coaches in the world are teaching their pitchers and catchers.
It has always been said that baseball is a game of inches, and it is these
inches around the plate that are so important.
Working both sides of the plate
The
ULTIMATE PITCHER’S and CATCHER’S PLATE is a very simple tool to use.
The orange edges are 5" wide on the top and 7" wide on the bottom front
of the plate and are a visual target for the pitcher to see. The
5” orange edges and white part of the plate cover 2.5” of a traditional
home plate and 2.5” off of a traditional home plate. The back part
of the plate is to help position the catcher. The catcher is to center
his or her body on the point of the white part of the plate giving the
pitcher the ultimate target to throw to on either corner of the plate.
This outstanding training tool is also perfect for fastpitch softball pitchers
and catchers.
The Ultimate Pitchers and Catchers
Plate
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Price:
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WAS: $69.95
ONLY: $39.95
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(ITEM PITCHERSPLATE)
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The
Ultimate Pitcher's and Catcher's Plate may be used as a throw down
plate or staked down for permanent placement. Instructions to stake
down the plate are included. The plate is zip tied to stake with special
lip on the head of the stake to hold zip ties in place. A stake is
driven into ground below the grounds surface so there is nothing exposed.
The
plate is made of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), a versatile family
of engineering thermoplastics. These materials demonstrate good resistance
to impact, even at low temperatures, and high electrical insulation that
is unaffected by changes in humidity. By the combination of the three
monomers, additional benefits are achieved. This combination provides
a product with a scuff and stain resistant, high gloss finish having anti-static
properties to repel attraction of airborne particles. It also has
excellent dimensional stability and good environmental stress cracking
resistance. This material makes this plate easy to carry because
it weighs just under 2 lbs. so it can be carried wherever you practice
or play, and very durable so that it may be staked down for permanent placement. |
The Ultimate Pitcher's and Catcher's
PlateTM was chosen as one of the TOP NEW PRODUCTS at the American Baseball
Coaches Association National Convention in Nashville, TN Jan. 6-8, 2005.
The ABCA did an info-mercial that will appear on their website very soon.
Ten Division I Baseball Programs in the Top 25 national rankings are using
The Ultimate Pitcher's and Catcher's PlateTM already.
MLB.com Article 2/22/05
The Ultimate Pitchers
and Catchers Plate makes it's debut at 2005 Major League Spring Training!
Brewers focus on location
Milwaukee
using plate designed by high school coaches
By Adam McCalvy / MLB.com
PHOENIX -- Derrick Turnbow
can fire a fastball 100 mph. So can Jose Capellan.
So why would the Brewers
tell their young guns to hold back?
"Because I know they can
throw 100 mph," said manager Ned Yost. "Show me that you can produce a
little feel and touch and command of the baseball."
That is what Yost and pitching
coach Mike Maddux are looking for from Brewers pitchers during the first
week of Spring Training. It's a tactic Yost borrowed from pitching-rich
Atlanta, where he spent a dozen years as a coach alongside pitching coach
Leo Mazzone. Maddux's brother is Greg, who won three of his four Cy Young
Awards as a Brave, and Mike is now instructing Brewers pitchers to dial
back during their early mound sessions.
The idea is that a pitcher
can be more effective by hitting his spots with less than 100 percent velocity
than by firing fastballs over the heart of home plate.
"That's something I've never
learned before," said Turnbow, who signed as a free agent from the Angels'
organization. "Before, my idea was, 'The harder, the better.' You have
to really trust that when you scale back, it might be even better. You're
not fighting your body as much. Maybe I'll throw harder and be able to
hit my spots better. Who knows?"
The Brewers have a new gadget
in camp to help Turnbow and other pitchers visualize those spots. It's
called "the ultimate pitcher's and catcher's plate," a patent-pending product
dreamed up by a quartet of high school coaches in Georgia.
As baseball gadgets go, it
is a simple one: a black-hued home plate flanked on either side by five-inch
wide white strips. The white covers 2.5 inches of the plate and 2.5 inches
off, and bright orange strips improve visibility from the pitcher's mound.
"If you can't command that
pitch, you're going to get hit," said Brewers right-hander Ben Hendrickson,
who learned that lesson the hard way during a difficult 2004. "Doesn't
matter if you are in the Majors or not."
That is not a breakthrough
in the science of pitching. Coaches everywhere tell kids that to be successful,
you have to work the outside and inside corners. The gadget is designed
to give pitchers and catchers a better visual in order to execute.
"Command is something that
you really can't teach, but you can improve it," Maddux said. "You can't
teach Greg Maddux command or Roger Clemens command, just like you can't
teach a Turnbow or a Capellan fastball. But we can get better, and that's
all we're trying to do."
Brewers pitchers combined
for a 4.24 ERA in 2004, ninth in the 16-team National League. Implementing
Maddux's "command-first" mantra, they issued 476 walks, third-best in the
league, while ranking fifth with 1,098 strikeouts.
Yost thinks the staff can
get better, and he is responsible for bringing the new training tool to
Maryvale Baseball Park. Yost received a call during the offseason from
Danny Pralgo, who coached Yost's son, Ned III, in the highly successful
East Cobb Baseball Program during the mid 1990s. Pralgo and three of his
former teammates came up with the idea for the "pitcher's plate."
Yost moved his family back
to Georgia during the offseason so his youngest son, Andrew, could play
baseball year-round. It was there that the Brewers' skipper agreed to meet
with Pralgo and his pitching coach of the past 11 years, Terry Bellah,
whom Pralgo calls "the mastermind behind this."
"I told him, 'There's so
many gimmicks out there, Danny, that it's hard to [imagine] that it's anything
worthwhile,'" Yost said. "But I looked at it, and it's very simple. It's
something that I thought was very useful."
Said Pralgo: "I kind of turned
to my buddy and said, 'We may have something here.'"
Pralgo and his partners formed
BPHL Sports and sold 200 of the gadgets before the first shipment came
from the manufacturer in December. By now, about 800 have been sold through
word of mouth and positive feedback from the American Baseball Coaches
Association National Convention last month, where the device was chosen
as a top new product.
Most of the sales have gone
to youth programs and universities. According to Pralgo, 10 of the top
25 Division I collegiate programs have invested in the plates, and some
youth programs have permanently installed them in Atlanta-area bullpens.
"It's all about creating
good habits early," Pralgo said. "The early response has been outstanding,
because this is something that can be used as high as the Major Leagues,
but it's also something a dad can throw down in the yard."
The philosophy has been working
for Pralgo's East Cobb team. The squad won the 2004 Pony League World Series
and was named USA Sports Rankings' No. 1 team in the country.
"The reason that they can
beat the powerhouse teams like Mexico and Japan ... [is that] his pitchers
could command the low-and-away strike, while the other teams can't," Yost
said. "As a Major League staff, we're trying to do the same."
The plate weighs 1.6 pounds
and is made of the same material in motorcycle helmets. It is portable,
but durable enough to take a beating and sturdy enough to stay in place
outdoors or indoors.
"We used to lay towels down
on either side of the plate, or draw lines," Pralgo said. "Every coach
has concocted their own system. This way is more visual, and it just backs
up what every coach is trying to teach.
"The reality is that the
hitters are so good and their bat speed is so fast, if you throw it down
the middle it's going to get turned on. You can't survive down the middle."
Pralgo believes the lessons
can benefit Major Leaguers as much as Little Leaguers.
"This is what we demand from
kids who are 13 and 14 years old," Pralgo said. "If we can demand it of
them, why can't the big guys demand it from their players? You'll only
get away with throwing it as hard as you can down the middle for so long."
For hard-throwers like Turnbow,
that is all he has ever known.
"A lot of guys know only
one speed," bullpen coach Billy Castro said. "You get guys up from the
minor leagues who think they have to throw harder in the Major Leagues.
But if you can locate your fastball and change speeds, that's it."
Said Turnbow: "I have to
learn that it's quality over velocity."
Adam
McCalvy is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject
to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
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