HOW POCKET PATH IMPROVES YOUR THROW
Pocket Path trains proper arm timing and connection to the body’s rotation, helping athletes throw with greater efficiency, accuracy, and power.
Slide your throwing arm into the Pocket Path sleeve and get comfortable in your starting stance. The sleeve creates a consistent reference point, helping you feel where your arm should be.
As you begin your throwing motion, guide your arm back through the sleeve. This reinforces the proper arm path and timing, preventing early arm action or drifting out of position.
Continue through your natural throwing motion, allowing your arm to move freely out of the sleeve into release. This helps translate the trained movement into a smooth, game-ready throw.
Team coaches face real constraints when trying to develop throwing mechanics:
• Large rosters
• Limited practice time
• Multiple coaching responsibilities
• Players at different development stages
Because of these realities, it’s impossible for a coach to personally monitor every throw, correct subtle timing errors in real time, and ensure every repetition is high quality.
Pocket Path solves this by providing a training system that guides movement, delivers feedback, and allows athletes to self-correct.
Throwing development does not require long training sessions.
5–10 minutes of focused guided reps, performed consistently with clear feedback, can produce more durable learning than occasional long throwing sessions.
Pocket Path makes this level of focused training realistic inside normal team practice.
Traditional throwing practice often wastes valuable reps:
• Long resets and chasing balls
• Missed or low-intent throws
• Inconsistent mechanics
A 5-minute Pocket Path training block can deliver:
• 30–50 quality throws per athlete
• Consistent mechanics
• Minimal arm stress
That level of repetition and efficiency is difficult to achieve with traditional partner throwing or long toss.
Pocket Path drills are largely self-regulating.
• The sleeve guides the arm along the correct path
• Athletes feel correct vs incorrect mechanics
• Errors become obvious without coach intervention
This allows coaches to:
• Set the drill
• Explain the goal
• Supervise the group instead of correcting individual throws
Pocket Path fits naturally into existing practice structures.
Examples include:
• 5 minutes of Pocket Path + wall plyo after warm-up or catch play
• 6–8 minute blocks between hitting groups
• Rotating stations (throwing, hitting, defense)
• Indoor or inclement weather practices
Investing a few minutes upfront in throwing skill development can:
• Reduce wild throws during drills
• Decrease arm soreness complaints
• Improve practice flow
• Reduce injury disruptions
• Allow all players to compete more effectively for positions
Every team practice already includes time spent throwing.
The difference is whether that time is used for intentional skill development or simply “getting loose.”
Pocket Path drills are short, efficient, guided, self-correcting, and scalable, allowing coaches to turn one of the hardest baseball skills to teach into one of the easiest skills to develop.