Softball Coaching Tips for Time Limit Games

With summer softball tournaments coming up, time limits play a big part in the game.  I’m sure you’ve seen coaches make critical time management errors in tournament games.  Poor decisions as a coach really can make the difference between a win and a loss for your team.  It’s absolutely imperative that you understand the implications of the different kinds of time limits used in the games you play.

Failing to understand the details of the situation your team is in can cost your team an important game, maybe even your tournament life.  The last thing you want to do is lose because of a simple and avoidable coaching error after your girls worked so hard to be in a position to win near the end of a game.

If you’ve ever wanted an easy to use chart to help you figure out what softball coaching strategies to use in time limit games, you’re in luck.  Such a chart actually does exist!

This Softball Time Management Chart was shared by Don McKay at BellaOnline.

It gives you softball coaching strategies for…

  • drop dead
  • no new inning
  • when you’re the visiting team
  • when you’re the home team
  • when you’re ahead
  • when you’re behind
  • when you’re at bat
  • and when you’re on defense!

Talk about thorough!  I love it.

But I do have one note for Mr. McKay: one situation you did forget was the no new inning after 1 hr 15 with a drop dead at 1hr 30 min.

I’m dead serious!

Am I the only one who thinks it’s SO weird to have BOTH in effect during one softball game.  Does anyone else run tournaments like that or is it just Hawaii???  I really want to know.  ;)

Click on the Chart Below to see the Full Version

time management and strategy chart for time limit softball games

Softball Coaching Tips – Are You Misplacing Your Hope?

softball coaching tips - hope

One thing I learned as a softball coach is that placing hope on the wrong things or the wrong people is a bad, bad idea.  This is true not only in softball, but in life.  It’s like when thousands and thousands of people though the government and mortgage companies were going to help them out with the loan modification program.

Almost ALL of those applications got denied and many of the ones that went through didn’t work anyway.  Thousands of Americans thought they would get much needed help.  Instead, they were strung out and denied.  Or they did get their loan modified, but still ended up losing their home even after modification.

That is an example of placing hope in the wrong place, on the wrong things or people.  It stinks.  You get kicked in the teeth.

When you misplace your hope, prepare to get messed over.

In softball, this happens when coaches place hope in just Plan A or in players who lack a track record of reliability.

You’ve probably seen it before.  The coach who has one strategy of attack and when that doesn’t work on a particular day, he has nothing to fall back on as a Plan B.  He mistakenly pinned all his hope on one strategy that, contrary to what he believed, is not the best strategy for every single situation or team you can possibly face in a season.

Maybe you’ve also seen coaches misplace their hope on the wrong person.  The Princess Diva All-Star that…

  • doesn’t work hard in practice
  • shows up late and doesn’t think anything of it
  • only gives 100% when she wants to or when she feels like it or when it’s convenient for her
  • acts as if it’s everyone or everything else’s fault when she struggles (the sun, the rain, the umpire, the catcher that called the wrong pitch, etc)
  • never owns up to any of her errors, mistakes, or faults

This is NOT the type of player you want to place all your team’s hope on.

Instead, choose players who will, regardless of the situation, dig in and give it their best shot.

Players who pick and choose when to be on time and when to try hard are going to be inconsistent in their performance because they are inconsistent in their approach and training.

Often times they will only try hard in drills they think are fun and slack or go through the motions in drills they don’t like doing.  This inconsistency in their training will lead to inconsistency in performance.

Not only that, trying hard only when they like what’s going on often equates to trying hard only when things are going well in the game.  For goodness sakes, that’s the easy part.  Anyone that can be upbeat, energetic, motivated, positive, confident and full of hustle when things are going great.

It’s the players who can do that no matter what that gives your team championship character and championship opportunities.  These players can play their game and perform at a solid level whether they’re in a situation they like or not, whether they’re in a situation that’s easy or not.

If a player can’t even make it a point to give their best in a practice drill just because they don’t like it or it gets too challenging is NOT going to be the one you can rely on during “big time” game situations or when your team gets behind or faces any other kind of adversity.

These players often make excuses for poor performance…

  • The ball is wet today, I can’t pitch like this
  • The sun is in my face, I can’t catch like this.
  • The wind is drying my contacts out, I can’t field like this.
  • The dirt is too soft in the batter’s box, I can’t hit like this.
  • The dirt is too hard on the field, I can’t run and slide like this.
  • The mound is crooked, I can’t pitch this.
  • The umpire is inconsistent, I can’t hit like this.
  • My rubberband isn’t holding my hair back…you get the idea.

Some of those might sound silly, but this type of excuse making is often evident in players who only give their best when they feel like it, who only follow team rules when they feel like it, who only hustle when it’s convenient for them.  They’re not what I hear Coach Heather Tarr refer to as “true athletes.”

Look for players who enthusiastically dig in to any challenge and give everything they got no matter what.  These players, no matter what you throw at them, just jump in and do it.  Whether the situation or task is hard or weird or uncomfortable, they will do their best to get the job done.  Whether people around them think they can or they can’t, it doesn’t matter, they are going to give it their best shot!

Players like this, who give everything they have day in and day out, are the ones you know you can count on!  These are the ones you place your hope in to go out there and play ball!  THESE are the players you put in key roles, not the ones you have to “hope” will show up and feel like playing on game day.

Adjustments Win Games

I recently watched a softball game in which one team obviously amde better adjustments than their opponent.

It may seem like a bad thing when your opponent gets on base more often than you in the beginning of a game.  But if your team makes adjustments, you still have a good chance of coming out on top.

After all, what you’d love to see is your pitching becoming more and more effective against opposing batters while your hitters become more and more effective against opposing pitchers.  It can happen!

Two things that popped into my mind after watching that very scenario unfold before my very eyes:

  1. The team that makes the best adjustments usually wins.
  2. If your pitchers and hitters are becoming less effective as the game wears on, you’re in trouble – especially if the opposite is true for your opponent.

Remember, even if 4 innings are gone and you’re heading into the 5th, there’s still a lot of game left.  I know 5th inning sounds “late in the game.”  If you’re starting the 5th, then only 4 innings have been completed and, in a 7 inning game, that means there are still 3 innings left!  In fact, 42.85% of the game still lies ahead of you. It’s hardly “too late.”

Obviously, as coaches, the ideal situation involves pure domination of our opponent from the very start of a game all the way through to the last out.  In a perfect world this happens every game of the season.  In the real world we know that’s simply not the case.  So, if your team happens to get off to a bit of a slow start…

Keep the faith.  Make adjustments. Always remember that ultimately, how your game ends is far more important than how it begins.

Popular Softball Thoughts of the Week

Obviously, softball is on my brain a lot.  I have quite a few softball thoughts that run through my head every day.  Not all of them are long enough to warrant an entire article or blog post all by themselves and that’s why I often share those via Facebook or Twitter.

However, there were quite a few this week that people really seemed to like, so I decided to put them together in this Thoughts of the Week post for you just in case you’re not all that social media savvy or simply had no clue that I was on either Facebook or Twitter:)

5 Softball Thoughts of the Week

original versions shared on Facebook and/or Twitter

  • Lack of focus during the week = sloppy game performance on the weekend
  • If you don’t have the guts to call your head coach to say you’ll be late or absent, then you probably don’t have a very good reason.
  • Dear softball bats,
    Wake Up! You should be well rested after the last 3 games…
  • You know you’re a softball coach when you forget the bikini tan because you sport a major coaching shirt tan instead.
  • Just Curious: How do you like your softball pants? Cast your vote and see the responses to date on Facebook

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If you are super social and want to connect with me on the web, check me out at…

Twitter

All About Fastpitch on Facebook

Stacie Mahoe on Facebook

Softball Injuries: 17 Tips for Using Ice and Heat

One thing you often see more and more of as the season wears on is injury.  Players have sore arms, sore shoulders, sore back, sore legs, etc, etc, etc.  Some people say to ice the injury, some say to use heat and it’s not always clear for the athlete when to use what.

So here are some basic tips and guidelines on using ice and/or heat for your softball injury:

  1. For Acute Injuries, where you feel pain shortly after the injury (sprain, fall, collision etc) – cold therapy with ice is the best immediate treatment to use.
  2. For Acute Injuries ice helps to reduce bleeding into tissue, reduce pain, reduce muscle spasms, reduce or prevent swelling
  3. For Chronic Injuries, ice is the best choice after a workout
  4. Do not use heat on acute injuries or on injuries that have inflammation or swelling because it can make imflammation and/or swelling worse
  5. Heat is good for sore, stiff, or nagging muscle/joint pain/injuries that do not have inflammation or swelling
  6. Heat is good to use on chronic injuries or pain before your workout/exercise
  7. It’s better NOT to ice a chronic injury before exercise
  8. Ice should be used on injuries less than 24 hours old or on injuries that continue to cause swelling
  9. Moist heat is the best (heating pads/moist towels) – make sure there are enough layers between your heating source and your skin
  10. Ice using something that conforms to your body (ice wraps, ice packs, frozen bag of veggies, etc)
  11. Do not put ice packs directly on skin
  12. Do not fall asleep with a heating pad on your injury!  Apply for no more than 30 minutes.
  13. You can ice an acute injury several times a day for up to 3 days
  14. There is little benefit to icing for longer than 20-30 minutes so do not leave ice on any longer than that
  15. Ice is also helpful when you re-aggravate a chronic injury
  16. If you are going to re-apply ice or heat, wait until your skin is completely back to normal in appearance
  17. When icing, check skin color after about 5 minutes.  If skin is bright pink or red, remove the ice pack!  If not, you can continue icing for another 5-10 minutes.

Softball Coaching Tips: DP/Flex Strategies Explained

The dp/flex rule allows much more than many coaches realize. It can be a bit confusing and complicated, but if you take some time to at least get familiar with some of the uses, the ones that can help your team the most, it will give you options you never knew you had.

One document that came in handy for me was the dp/flex strategies printout available at nfhs.org (DOWNLOAD HERE). Like I said, at first it was a bit confusing, but actually writing out a lineup with names of players on your team may help you grasp the concepts and dp/flex strategies being shared. You may not understand all the different possible uses, but just choose one or two that you feel will help your team most and get familiar with how to implement the strategy and use it in a game situation.

Then…give it a shot in a real game or scrimmage and let me know how it goes!!!

SP Tour – 3 Tips for Reducing Parent Conflict

This is the stop for Day 3 of the SoftballPerformance.com 10th Anniversary Tour!

Today’s stop features a free report softball coaches can use to help reduce problems with parents during the season.  Dealing with can become a huge distraction in your season and negatively affect the performance of your team.  Plus it’s just a bunch of stress you don’t need.  Unfortunately, I don’t have the magic cure to guarantee elimination of all parent issues, but this report has 3 useful and practical tips you can use to significantly reduce the likelihood of major parent problems.

3 Tips for Reducing Parent Conflict

Click Here to Download