quote:
Anyway, It's not the Glove> But the Hand that's in it that make's the Play.
I beg to differ... The personal story.
HaverSon was (in college) primarily a first baseman, a position he moved to his senior year in HS, and while he has limited range, he has very fast hands.
Before his senior year in H.S. we bought a Wilson A2800, which served very well, and well enough that he was errorless during his soph year at college, starting every game.
Unfortunately, the A2800 was worn out, and it's replacement, some Rawlings (I forget the model) never really broke in with enough depth/width at the bottom of the pocket. It was jut a tiny bit narrow and shallow.
The result was, that occasionally he couldn't hold on to balls in the dirt that would bounce a bit high and hit near the heel.
He was still a good fielder of short hops, but no longer absolutely automatic. In, his junior year, he made two errors in 37 games, but both were the kind decribed, and both were those kind of scoops he'd always made.
That summer (2005) he played another 37 games in the ACBL and made 3/4 errors, and all the same type scoops, low in the pocket that didn't stick.
NOTE: He never pointed blame at the glove, but it was clear to me.
Although I wasn't keen to buy a new glove for his senior seaon, I couldn't take it. A new A2800 was ordered. Early in the season, before the new glove was fully broken, two scoops didn't stick, but then he ran off 25+ errorless games, again making exceptional scoops seem routine.
Maybe it was confidence, but for my money it was the glove.
and money well spent.