How to Stop Pulling Off the Ball
"Pulling off the ball" — flying open with your front side so your head and shoulder drift toward the dugout — is one of the most common swing killers in baseball and softball. It saps power, kills your opposite-field swing, and leaves you vulnerable to outside pitches. Here's how to fix it.
What "Pulling Off" Actually Means
Pulling off is when your front shoulder, hip, or head opens up too early and travels away from the pitch instead of staying in the path. You end up swinging across the ball rather than through it, rolling over and yanking everything to the pull side.
Why It Happens
- Over-trying for power: hitters yank to create force, but it does the opposite.
- Fear or bailing: flinching away from inside pitches.
- Poor direction: the stride or front side aims toward the pull side instead of the pitcher.
Drills That Fix It
Opposite-Field Tee Work
Set the tee deep and outside, and drive line drives the other way. This forces you to stay closed and let the ball travel — the exact opposite of pulling off.
Step-Behind / Inside-Out Drill
Work on hitting inside pitches to the middle or opposite field by keeping the hands inside the ball, which trains your front side to stay in.
Wall Drill
Set up with your front shoulder a few inches from a net or wall and swing without pulling away from it — instant feedback when you fly open.
Fix the Direction
Make sure your stride goes toward the pitcher, not toward third base (for a righty). A closed, direct stride makes staying in much easier.
The Bottom Line
Stay closed, keep your eyes on the contact point, and groove an opposite-field swing. Pulling off disappears when you stop trying to pull everything. Find a cage to drill it →
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