A leadoff puts the runner in motion before the pitch is thrown. The timing of the walk and the read of the pitcher’s motion determine whether a runner steals a base or gets doubled off.

Equipment needed: Three bases, a mound, 10 softballs, a pitcher and catcher.

Setup: Three runners on bases (first, second, third). Pitcher on the mound. Catcher behind the plate. Fielders at key positions (short, second, first).

How to run it:

  1. Runners take a small lead (one step off the base).
  2. Pitcher gets set.
  3. On the pitcher’s arm movement, runners take a two-step lead.
  4. If the pitcher pitches, they keep going. If the pitcher steps off, they jog back to the base.
  5. Run 5 reps per runner at each base. Rotate.

The runners are practicing the rhythm of a leadoff, not stealing. Just the walk and the read.

What to look for: Quick footwork during the walk, and a good break on the pitcher’s motion. Runners who are flat-footed will get picked off.

Variation: For younger kids (11), just walk off the base without the run/back read. For older kids (12), add a pitcher’s pickoff throw so they practice diving back.