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Cabbage, can you explain in more detail how "having the players cut out shapes and place them at the appropriate depth to visualize what they are looking for" works? Sounds interesting.
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This is tied in as one of many angles we use in regards to having a solid mental hitting approach...
For overall visualization, I have a large cardboard cutout and a smaller one. The large represents the average size of the actual strike zone, including some expansion for a ball catching the black. The size of the cutout and the visual of it surprises the hitters when first introduced - it is big. This cutout represents the zone that should be protected with two strikes. We hold the cutout up over a rubber home plate and move it around slightly, discussing variances such as player size and specific umpire zones.
The smaller cutout represents the realistic size of a zone that an average player can really attack and drive the ball. By design, we want it small enough that all balls in that zone can be driven hard but big enough that it encourages an aggressive approach. (Using the bigger cutout, we explore different areas, asking if pitches in various locations can be driven hard. The smaller cutout is a result of the average area that players can attack.) Then, thru both discussion and drills, we will help each individual hitter identify his specific "drive zone". Each hitter is better with pitches in different locations, some preferring middle in, middle away, down in, etc. So, then, we go back to the small cutout and have each hitter move it around (in relation to the plate and his stance) until he finds and clearly visualizes his attack zone. We use a rectangle shaped cutout, painted a distinct color, and it may be turned vertically or horizontally depending on hitter preferences.
We also tie in drills that enable the hitter to understand where his maximum power position is as it relates to how deep or how far in front he should try to make contact. Then, we go back to the cutouts and place them at the optimal depth. Clear visualization of pitches he should attack. We will incorporate additional drills where the hitter will see pitches with the primary focus being to identify yes or no (is the pitch in the drive zone).
We will do something similar with the large cutout as it relates to having a two strike approach.