Soft toss teaches hand-eye coordination with a moving ball. The underhand toss is slow enough that kids can react, and it’s close enough to your position that you see every swing.

Equipment needed: 20-25 baseballs, a bucket, a net behind the hitter or open field with a fence, one bat.

Setup: You stand 30 feet from home plate with the bucket of balls. The hitter stands at home. A net or fence is behind them to catch balls.

How to run it:

  1. Call out the location before each toss: “Inside corner,” “Outside corner,” “Up and in,” “Low and away.”
  2. Toss the ball underhand at 10-15 mph so it arrives at chest height, waist height, or wherever you called it.
  3. They swing. Repeat.
  4. Do 20 tosses. Most kids will make contact on 12-16 of them.

What to look for: Adjustments. If you toss inside, they should shift weight forward. If you toss low, they should drop the hands. Kids who are rigid will swing the same way on every pitch.

Variation: For younger kids (8-9), toss from 25 feet and toss every ball at the same height (waist) to build consistency. For older kids (10), add variables: high fastball, low breaking ball (rolled gently), inside corner, outside corner.