The Scouting Classroom #16
What Scouts Watch During Infield/Outfield
Pregame Defense Matters
Pregame defense matters. A lot!
Most fans don’t pay close attention during infield/outfield. They’re finding their seat, checking the lineup, or waiting for the game to start. But scouts are already working, because a player can tell you a lot before the first pitch is ever thrown.
Infield/Outfield Is Not Just Warmup
To a scout, infield/outfield is part of the evaluation. It is a chance to watch feet, hands, exchange, arm action, carry, accuracy, body control, first step, angles, rhythm, and energy. The throw is only the last part of the play. The real evaluation starts before the ball ever reaches the glove.
How does the player move into position? Does he work through the baseball? Are his feet active or heavy? Are the hands soft or stiff? Does the exchange happen naturally? Does the arm work clean? Does the ball carry with life, or does he have to max out to make the throw?
That’s what scouts are watching
The Feet Tell the First Story
Before the arm, before the glove, before the throw, I’m watching the feet. Bad feet usually create bad throws. A player can have arm strength, but if his feet don’t work, the arm may never play the way it should.
Infielders have to create rhythm, read hops, get their body in position, and play through the ball instead of letting the ball play them.
Outfielders have to show reads, routes, angles, body control, and the ability to get behind the baseball.
A big arm is nice, but a big arm with bad feet is not the same as a playable defensive tool.
It’s More Than Just Arm Strength
Fans love the big arm. Scouts do too. But scouts are not just asking, “Was it hard?” We’re asking if it carried, if it was accurate, if the arm action was clean, if the ball stayed true, and if the player can make that throw again and again.
There is a difference between a player who can air one out in pregame and a player whose arm is a real tool. A real arm plays with carry, accuracy, and consistency.
Hands and Exchange Matter
For infielders, hands tell you a lot. Are they soft? Are they confident? Does the player receive the ball cleanly? Can he adjust to an in-between hop? Does he funnel naturally? Does the exchange happen quickly without panic?
Some players look athletic until the ball gets to them. Then the game gets loud, the hands get hard, the feet stop, the exchange gets long, and the throw rushes.
That’s evaluation
A scout is not only looking for the routine play. He is looking for how clean the body works when the play speeds up.
Outfielders Get Evaluated Too
Outfield defense is not just catching fly balls and throwing to the cutoff man. Scouts are watching reads off the bat, first step, route efficiency, closing speed, body control near the wall, ability to play through the ball, throwing mechanics, carry, accuracy, and comfort moving in space.
A fast player is not automatically a good outfielder. Speed helps, but reads and instincts are what make the speed play. That is the difference between raw tools and baseball tools.
And there is a difference
The Lesson for Players
Never sleepwalk through infield/outfield. You may think nobody is watching, but a scout probably is, and he may learn more than you realize.
Pregame defense is not the time to be casual. It is the time to show pride in your position, to show that your actions are real, and to prove that your tools can play.
Because defensive evaluation doesn’t start when the ball is hit in the game. It starts in pregame.
The feet, the hands, the exchange, the arm, the carry, the accuracy, the rhythm, the body control, and the energy all matter.
Scouts are not just watching the throw
They are watching everything before it
That’s where evaluation begins
That’s Scouting
#BehindTheRadarGun 🔎
The Scouting Classroom #15
WHAT SCOUTS WATCH IN BATTING PRACTICE
One of the biggest misconceptions in baseball is what people think scouts are watching during batting practice.
Fans watch where the ball lands.
Scouts watch how it gets there.
Anybody can get fooled by one loud round.
One long home run. One ball hit over the scoreboard.
One swing that gets people talking.
But scouting has never been about chasing highlights.
It’s about identifying repeatable ingredients.
Because batting practice gives scouts something valuable:
A controlled environment.
No velocity. No breaking balls. No two-strike count. No game pressure.
Just the hitter and the swing.
And when you remove the variables, the swing starts telling a story.
Scouts begin asking questions:
Is there rhythm?
Is there balance?
Is there bat speed?
Is the barrel accurate?
Does the ball jump differently?
Can the hitter create easy carry?
Is the swing efficient?
Can he repeat it?
Does he stay through the middle of the field?
Can he backspin the baseball?
Can he manipulate the barrel?
Does the body actually work?
Those things matter.
Because tools show themselves before production does.
You can hit a long BP home run and fool people.
I've seen players put on unbelievable batting practice shows and completely fall apart once the game started.
And I’ve also seen future big leaguers take quiet rounds where the average fan saw nothing special.
But scouts noticed. Why?
Because the ingredients were there.
The rhythm.
The bat speed.
The timing.
The barrel accuracy.
The ease of operation.
The body control.
The foundation.
Good scouts learn to separate results from ingredients.
Because distance is easy to see.
The swing underneath it takes experience.
The swing tells you a story long before the stat line ever does.
That’s Scouting
#BehindTheRadarGun 🔎
7AAAA Seeding has been released:
1. Centennial
2. Anoka
3. Blaine
4. Andover
5. Forest Lake
6. Duluth East
7. Cambridge-Isanti
8. Coon Rapids
Tornadoes will host Cambridge-Isanti Wednesday at 4:30 in an opening round game.
Join us tomorrow night at 7 pm for a game vs Centennial as we honor John Wallner for his commitment and dedication to Forest Lake baseball. Thank you for all you do, John!
Went 2-2 for last night with a double and my first varsity HR. Year is going well so far hitting .411 so far during my Freshman year.@GoGoGominsky22@PrepBaseballMN#MNBombSquad
Join us on Saturday, May 16 at Schumacher Field in Forest Lake to bring awareness to suicide prevention and the importance of mental health! We hope to see you at the ballpark!! Lower levels at 11 am and 1:30. Varsity at 4!
2027 SS @brody_radtke (Forest Lake, MN) smashes 2 base hits in today’s win over Roseville. Radtke was 5-for-5 in defensive chances, turned a slick 6-4-3 and ended the game with a fantastic on-the-run dart to end the game.
Catch this kid in the summer for the Blizzard!
@AdamBarta1212@coletalbers
#BlizzardBaseball
Tomorrow is the Home Opener! Come support the Rangers at Schumacher Field. Free admission, great burgers, and even better baseball! @FLBABaseball
Forest Lake vs Woodbury @ 4:30
Mother Nature threw us a curveball today! No problem.. we can hit those too!! Thanks to https://t.co/96BsdFozmS for hosting us today on short notice! Great facility, great energy, great practice!
Trying out for baseball in two weeks?
Things to do TODAY:
1. Get registered—it makes planning easier when we have players registered early!
2. Fill out your player survey posted on the app!
3. Volunteer for FLBA tryouts (in the app)
4. V/JV players pay your spring trip fee!