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Hi, I am new to the forum. My son has been pitching for the past 4-5 years and was pitching really well. Last year he was asked to play up with an older team for a weekend and then all of a sudden he couldn't pitch at all. The rest of the season was hit and miss with his pitching. He would throw 5 feet in front of him into the dirt or 10 feet over the catchers head. Fast forward to now we finally are out for the first time these past few weeks and it is back and he is even struggling to play catch with someone. When he is fielding he can throw back great but as soon as he is face to face throwing back and forth he can't throw... Help. He is so upset. 

Thanks for any advice or feedback.

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Make sure he's still throwing fundamentally sound. He could be opening up too soon or holding the ball too long. He needs to play catch, fire the ball and not worry about throwing over the receiver's head. It will all come back faster if he's firing the ball rather than pussing it. Focus on the receiver's chest.

Last edited by RJM

Hi Baseballmom, I had a catcher this season who started out the season with a bad case of the yips.  I thought it was mechanics and tried to address it by looking for breakdowns in his form.  We checked everything from his grip to his footwork.  No amount of tweaking had an effect.  During a game he could not get the ball back to the pitcher.  He actually threw one that bounced five feet in front of him and over the pitcher's head.  People in the stands began watching his throwback more closely than the game.  His dad was devastated and began looking for cures on the internet.

He found a psychologist on google who claimed to be able to cure the yips.  I think his name was Crowley, the dad said he had a website that described the yips and why it is purely mental.  He called the man and discussed the problem.  They scheduled several telephone sessions between the psychologist and player.  I asked the dad how much this was costing and he declined to tell, but said it was pretty expensive.  I'm going to assume that means it was several hundred dollars, but I don't know. 

I told the dad that I thought this might be a scam, but he was desperate.  He said the guy asked us not to work mechanics or try change anything about the player's throws for a few weeks.  We did.  After a couple of weeks, the kid was throwing much better.  He did some mental tricks like swiping his glove in the dirt or tapping his head before throwing the ball.  It looked a little strange, but his throwbacks were clean.  That's been about a month and a half ago and he still swipes his glove sometimes, but I haven't seen a bad throw in a while.

I was very skeptical when the Dad told me he was going to have his son talk to this guy.  I have to say now that my skepticism may have been misplaced.  The dad says that it was money well spent and he is very happy. 

Last edited by jdb

Welcome to the board, BBM14.  As TPM said, first make sure it's not injury related.  If you've already ruled that out, as others have also said (and you more than likely know)...yips is mental.  If there was a magic bullet fix, Mark Wohlers, Tracy Rocker and Ricky Ankiel would've had much longer pitching careers.  There is also hope though:  Jarrod Saltalamacchia got rid of them back in 2011 (with the help of a sports psychologist).

When I had players with yips, I would tell them to sing their favorite song (or rap their favorite rap) while throwing.  I think one of the Major League movies even had a catcher recite lingerie descriptions from a Victoria's Secret catalog (or something like that).  The point is to take his mind of the act of throwing and let his body do what it can do.

As JDB said, there are a bunch of folks out there claiming to help and some may be successful.  There have been a few posts about Dr. Crowley, but I know nothing about his successes or failures.  I know Salty went to Dr. Tom Hanson and he swore by him, but that's about it.

Best of luck to you and your son.

 

Catcher son went through yips last year.  It was rough, every throw back to pitcher I held my breath or every blocked 3rd strike that he had to throw to first.  But he could get outs at second and 3rd.

We went all the way back to an arm action class.  It was my 14 yr old and a 10 year old learning how to throw.

Haven't had yips since.  starting frosh catcher now on jv, saw another teams catcher with yips back to pitcher.  I felt the same way with that kid as i did my own, just hoping he could get it back to pitcher.  Knowing that feeling, tough to watch.   Good luck

Not sure if you knew of or remember Mackey Sasser.  They did a great feature on his issue and how he's dealt (dealing) with it.  I remember watching baserunners steal on him while he threw the ball back to the pitcher and was baffled by his affliction.  Actually hadn't heard anything about him since until this video.  About a 15 minute watch if you're interested.  

Your son is definitely not the first nor will he be the last to deal with this.  While his issue (and solution) may be very different from Sasser's, it will certainly give some insight to how he's feeling.  I think that Former Yipper hit the nail in the head in his thread.  Have your son openly and honestly address the coach and team so that the embarrassment and fear portion can be addressed first so that he can focus on moving forward.  Like JDB's player in the post above, it was handled on the mental side.

Best of luck.

 http://grantland.com/features/...orts-fields-of-fear/

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