How to Practice Hitting Alone: A Solo Cage Routine
You don't need a coach, a partner, or a team to get better at hitting. Some of the best development happens alone, with a tee, a net, and a plan. Here's a complete solo hitting routine you can run in any cage.
What You Need
A hitting net or cage, a tee, a bucket of balls, and optionally a pitching machine for live timing. That's it. A phone on a tripod for video is a huge bonus.
The Solo Session Structure
1. Warm Up (5 minutes)
Loosen up with band work or easy swings. Never start a session cold — it's how swings get sloppy and bodies get hurt.
2. Tee Work (10–15 minutes)
Run two or three focused tee drills — contact points, opposite field, swing plane. This is your mechanical foundation for the day.
3. Front Toss or Machine (10–15 minutes)
If you have a machine, this is where you add timing. Work the same intent from your tee work against a moving ball. No machine? Self-flip soft toss into the net.
4. Situational "Game" Swings (5–10 minutes)
Finish by visualizing at-bats: behind in the count, runner on second, two strikes. Give each swing a purpose so practice transfers to games.
Make It Repeatable
The magic of solo work is consistency. Three focused 30-minute sessions a week beat one marathon. Keep a simple log of what you worked on and what felt good.
Stay Honest With Yourself
Without a coach, video is your coach. Pick one thing to improve per session, film it, and check whether you actually did it. That feedback loop is what turns reps into progress.
The Bottom Line
A tee, a net, a plan, and your phone are enough to get noticeably better. Build the routine, track it, and show up. Find a private cage to run your solo sessions →
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