Pitching and Pitchers Discussion Just How Accurate Are Your Pitchers?

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By: Cindy Bristow

Accuracy is king in pitching. You have it and you win ? you don?t have it, and well, you?ll lose. Help your pitchers get more accurate with this accuracy practice chart.
It all happens over in the bullpen when pitchers practice their various pitches to the different locations, all the while fooling themselves that they?re accurate. I say fooling themselves because ?close is good enough? is what usually goes during pitching practice. But, get in a game with one of those stingy umpires, and close isn?t even close enough. That?s when the good pitcher adjusts, and the lesser pitcher complains.
If your pitchers struggle with their accuracy during games it?s no doubt because they are being held to tougher standards than the ones they give themselves during practice. If close is good enough in practice, and then suddenly close isn?t even close in a game ? well, it?s going to be a long game!
2013-03-14-Chart.jpg

To help your pitchers start to face the reality of an unforgiving strikezone, we?ve got to put them in that situation during practice. We can do that using a Pitching Accuracy Chart that?s simple to use, and visually shows your pitcher where?s she?s strong, and where she needs to improve. It also tells her which pitches she can depend on, and which ones she should continue developing but not depend on when she needs a strike.
Here?s how it works ? the picture to the right shows a completed Pitching Accuracy Chart. I know it looks confusing right now but follow me. You?ll notice there are 6 numbers on the chart (1-6) representing 6 different locations in the strike zone. You could have more or less depending on how good your pitchers are, and what level you play. For this example I?m using these 6 locations, from the pitcher?s perspective:

  1. Low/Right (not inside since it would be outside to a lefty hitter)
  2. Low/Left
  3. Middle/Right
  4. Middle/Left
  5. High/Right
  6. High/Left
Then I?ve put Pitch: ____ 3 times beside each location followed by 10 circles. I simply ask the pitcher I?m working with to name the pitches she throws to each of these 6 locations and I write down the pitch. For instance, for location 1, you see an X = Changeup, FB = Fastball, and Drop = Drop.
Once you go around to all the locations and list the pitches that your pitcher throws, she then starts at location 1 with the first pitch, in this case the X (changeup) and she throws 10 of them. You simply fill in the circle when the pitch works and hits the location. (You might notice little marks on the blank circles; this is what I do when I use this chart so I can keep track of what pitch number she?s on.) Do this for all the pitches at each of the locations and then create totals.
2013-03-14-Chart-identified.jpg

When your pitcher finishes all of the locations you?ll end up with a picture of her accuracy ? or even, lack of it. While this might seem depressing, it?s REALLY important that we help our pitchers see the positive value of this chart instead of it simply convincing them they?re horrible.
In looking at the chart to the right, it?s the same accuracy chart except I?ve just circled the totals for the various locations. The dotted Red circles show her total accuracy for each of the 6 locations. The dotted Blue circles show her accuracy for the Right and the Left sides, and the dotted Black circles show her accuracy for her High and Low locations.
So, here?s that this tells us:

  • She?s the most accurate at #4, with 45% strikes!
  • The FB (fastball) is her most accurate pitch with 5/10 at both #2 and #4!
  • She?s about even with her Left (24%) and Right (25%) accuracy, as well as her High (26%) and Low (25%) accuracy
Our immediate lessons:

  • This is an extremely tough thing to do because it makes the pitcher face her fears. But because of that it?s very helpful since we can now attack our improvements.
  • Don?t be surprised if your pitcher freaks out during this since she?s being held accountable to her accuracy which can be very distracting for her if she focuses on you writing things down instead of her making the pitches work.
  • It helps her know what to spend her time in practice improving, and helps whoever calls pitches know what pitches to throw and where to throw them ? and ? what pitches NOT to throw.
While this is a tough thing to face as a pitcher ? actually seeing your accuracy or lack of it on paper ? it happens every single time we pitch in a game. Using this chart every couple weeks in practice will really help your pitchers start to focus more specifically on doing things more precisely that will help them be more precise during games. And control is really just precision.
 
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Just repeating from second hand a stat from one of our HS pitchers last year .. 7 HBP's , 5 were on a 0-2 count . Is that good ?
 
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7 HBPs could be good, okay or bad - depends on the number of innings she pitched. 5 of 7 being with an 0-2 count is not good unless she got a lot of strikeouts with inside pitches. Hitting batters with an 0-2 count is a pet peeve of mine and the person calling the pitches bears some responsibility too.
 
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5 batters hit on 0-2 counts is a "crime" ... you definitely want to be off the plate 0-2 (0-2 pitches over the plate are a pet peeve of mine!) but you totally defeat the purpose if you hit the batter and put them on when you have a count advantage like that ... I can see one or two slipping away over the course of a season, but 5! I don't think my DD hit 5 batters on 0-2 counts playing for 10 years 3 seasons a year ...
 
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Arriving at an 0-2 count from swings (not called strikes) = anxious batter, and sets the table for a change-up at the knees - one that falls off the table. I witnessed MANY of these (pre-college level :)) that were both "swing-out-of-your-shoes" strike-outs and called third strikes - over the plate at the knees.
 
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Sammy ... agreed the changeup in that location can be effective in that situation to a better hitter, but I wouldn't throw it to a bottom of the lineup hitter being dominated with the fast stuff ... would rather go up or outside on them and see if they will fish ...

By the way, just to be clear, if you're not hitting a few batters here and there, you're not working the inside of the plate enough ... most pitchers hate to give the batter that free pass, but you have to show them you work all parts of the plate, and put a little fear into hitters that you might just hit them every once in a while ... part of the game ...
 
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DD isn't the most accurate, but HBP or a walk after being ahead 0-2 or 1-2 makes me crazy.
 
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this chart won't show impact of multiple speeds for each pitch and ultimately accuracy could be judged on how many K's and hits and even zero-run games occur. Not a bad tool to use for development and gauging. Thanks for sharing.
 
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I just want to know who is throwing fastballs in those #3 and #4 locations??…how come we never play those teams?? :D
 
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I just want to know who is throwing fastballs in those #3 and #4 locations??…how come we never play those teams?? :D
Lots of mediocre pitchers do - but they call them curves and/or screwballs... :D

I was more concerned by the curves/screws to #3/#4. Unless a pitcher is overpowering, throwing any flat pitch to #3/#4 over the outside of the plate is a good way to get hurt by a comebacker - especially at the older ages where they can easily reach outside pitches.
 
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Stroh-
I applaud you for charting pitches like this. There are many ways to drill location, location. But your chart not only is sobering but also tedious looking. I can only imagine me trying to pull this on DD during practice. When you chart like this do you move around the plate for each pitch or do you stay in one location for 10 pitches? Also does someone record for you? Just trying to figure out how to incorporate this.
I agree once DD has shown good control, it is important to add pressure situations to help with the mental game!
 
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I remember a coach telling me my DD was just wild enough to keep the batters scared, of course this was 10U!
 

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