Timing Drills Every Hitter Should Do
You can have a perfect swing and still be late — or early — and roll over everything. Timing is the bridge between mechanics and results, and it's trainable. Here are the timing drills every hitter should be doing.
Why Timing Is Its Own Skill
Hitting is reacting to a moving ball at different speeds. Great mechanics in a vacuum don't matter if your swing arrives late. Timing drills train you to start your swing at the right moment and adjust to changing velocity.
Drill 1: Vary the Speeds
On a machine, change the velocity between rounds (or pitches) so you can't groove one timing. This forces you to read and adjust — exactly what a game demands.
Drill 2: Front Toss With a Rhythm Cue
Have the feeder vary the rhythm of the toss so you practice loading on time to different deliveries. Call out "yes" when you'd start your swing to train the trigger.
Drill 3: Recognize and React
Mix pitch types and speeds (fastball/offspeed) so you train recognition and timing together. Being on time for the fastball and adjustable to the offspeed is the whole game.
Drill 4: The "Two-Plate" Stride Timing Drill
Focus a round entirely on getting your front foot down early and on time — before the ball arrives — so you're balanced and ready to fire. Late front foot is the most common timing flaw.
Drill 5: Game-Speed Reps
Finish with reps at realistic game velocity. Practicing only on a slow machine builds slow timing. Train at the speeds you'll actually face.
The Bottom Line
Build a consistent trigger, vary the speeds, get your foot down early, and rep at game speed. Timing is a skill — train it on purpose. Find a cage with a machine to dial it in →
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