Chris101 Posted April 5 Report Posted April 5 Which signal should be made for dropped third strike, whit on hand or whit both hand ? Quote
0 jimurrayalterego Posted April 5 Report Posted April 5 39 minutes ago, Chris101 said: Which signal should be made for dropped third strike, whit on hand or whit both hand ? Most of us have transitioned to what we saw MLB change to. Right hand out. I've seen some lower level coaches ask what was that signal. Quote
0 SeeingEyeDog Posted April 5 Report Posted April 5 7 hours ago, Chris101 said: Which signal should be made for dropped third strike, whit on hand or whit both hand ? Every time I go to a camp or a cage session, it seems this mechanic and verbal changes... My current arsenal is: Called U3K: point the strike and announce the strike, come out in front of the plate, and make what I call a half-safe signal (left arm remains at my side, right hand is palm down with right index finger against chest which then swings straight out to the side of my body extended...I do this motion twice) while also saying loudly, "NO CATCH! NO CATCH!" and then remain arm extended briefly Swinging U3K: point the strike with NO verbal...and move on to everything else above Stay tuned for another update on this later in the year, I'm sure... ~Dawg Quote
0 BLWizzRanger Posted April 5 Report Posted April 5 Sorry, not directed to you, but when I read this, the hoky-poky song popped in my head. Put your right hand in, put your right hand out, put both hands in and extended them out....and do the hoky poky.... 1 Quote
0 noumpere Posted April 6 Report Posted April 6 13 hours ago, jimurrayalterego said: Most of us have transitioned to what we saw MLB change to. Right hand out. I've seen some lower level coaches ask what was that signal. Which is why I continue to recommend the full safe sign with a verbal “no” ( or no catch— but be sure it can’t be interpreted as “catch”— or “ball’s on the ground “—I really don’t like that one. if you make it to some level where an assigner cares, use the recommended signal. 1 Quote
0 TheLovejoy Posted April 6 Report Posted April 6 I was taught it should be a 'safe' signal, then just leaving the right arm out. A guy from the AP Western States clinic joked with us saying it developed from a safe signal, to just leaving the right hand out signaling that he was only 'half safe' at that point. It made us chuckle. 1 Quote
1 beerguy55 Posted April 7 Report Posted April 7 "He didn't catch the F*#King ball" would be clear and concise communication. 1 2 Quote
0 BigBlue4u Posted April 7 Report Posted April 7 On 4/5/2026 at 2:41 PM, SeeingEyeDog said: Called U3K: point the strike and announce the strike, come out in front of the plate, and make what I call a half-safe signal (left arm remains at my side, right hand is palm down with right index finger against chest which then swings straight out to the side of my body extended...I do this motion twice) while also saying loudly, "NO CATCH! NO CATCH!" and then remain arm extended briefly On 4/5/2026 at 9:29 PM, noumpere said: Which is why I continue to recommend the full safe sign with a verbal “no” ( or no catch— but be sure it can’t be interpreted as “catch”— or “ball’s on the ground “—I really don’t like that one. I completely agree. Giving a full safe sign indicates the batter is not out. Making a half-safe signal makes no sense at all. Quote
0 jimurrayalterego Posted April 7 Report Posted April 7 55 minutes ago, BigBlue4u said: I completely agree. Giving a full safe sign indicates the batter is not out. Making a half-safe signal makes no sense at all. The absence of the out signal indicates the batter is not out. The no catch signal indicates the uncaught third strike. The right arm pointing a strike and no catch seems to work at pro, college and in my area, high school. 1 Quote
0 noumpere Posted April 8 Report Posted April 8 If the ball skips into F4’s glove, or F7 dives and the ball bounces up into his glove, do we give a half-safe signal? I don’t understand why D3K would be different. I accept that it’s what MLB and many NCAA coordinators want, and that it works because the coaches and players know how to interpret it. Quote
0 jimurrayalterego Posted April 8 Report Posted April 8 13 minutes ago, noumpere said: If the ball skips into F4’s glove, or F7 dives and the ball bounces up into his glove, do we give a half-safe signal? I don’t understand why D3K would be different. I accept that it’s what MLB and many NCAA coordinators want, and that it works because the coaches and players know how to interpret it. On a swing the no catch signal would be unambiguous. On no swing with a called strike it would come after the strike signal. In either case you might be making a "safe" signal when F1 is tagging the B-R and then would transition to the out signal. After using the no catch for many years with no problems I then transitioned to what I saw in MLB and continued to not have problems. Quote
0 wolfe_man Posted April 8 Report Posted April 8 Perhaps I am doing it wrong, but I tend to signal the strike with my hammer. If uncaught, then I give a safe signal and point out to the side with my right hand at shoulder height (half-safe signal I just learned) to indicate that the pitch wasn't caught and keep it held there until the runner either is put out, or arrives safely, at first base. I used to just do the point-and-hold, but started recently doing the safe signal for some reason. I don't vocalize anything on uncaught third strikes which ought to be another sign to the batter/runner and coaches that I don't have a caught strike three or I would be doing my K3 mechanic and vocalization. 1 Quote
0 JSam21 Posted April 9 Report Posted April 9 On 4/7/2026 at 11:12 PM, noumpere said: If the ball skips into F4’s glove, or F7 dives and the ball bounces up into his glove, do we give a half-safe signal? I don’t understand why D3K would be different. I accept that it’s what MLB and many NCAA coordinators want, and that it works because the coaches and players know how to interpret it. The reason why is because it looks terrible to give a safe signal, followed immediately by an out call for the tag. Just point the strike and hold it out. Quote
0 JaxRolo Posted April 11 Report Posted April 11 The reason why is because it looks terrible to give a safe signal, followed immediately by an out call for the tag. Just point the strike and hold it out. I don’t think it looks terrible. Makes more sense than just 1 hand. Quote
0 BigBlue4u Posted Monday at 04:28 AM Report Posted Monday at 04:28 AM On 4/9/2026 at 7:09 AM, JSam21 said: The reason why is because it looks terrible to give a safe signal, followed immediately by an out call for the tag. Just point the strike and hold it out. It may look terrible to you, but there is a reason behind it. You have two different plays. 1) the 3K strikeout and 2) the dropped ball. Quote
0 JSam21 Posted Monday at 12:10 PM Report Posted Monday at 12:10 PM 7 hours ago, BigBlue4u said: It may look terrible to you, but there is a reason behind it. You have two different plays. 1) the 3K strikeout and 2) the dropped ball. On 4/11/2026 at 10:24 AM, JaxRolo said: I don’t think it looks terrible. Makes more sense than just 1 hand. You hold the point for the strike... then you make a signal if there is a tag attempt... it is much cleaner and eliminates confusion. Quote
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Chris101
Which signal should be made for dropped third strike, whit on hand or whit both hand ?
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beerguy55
"He didn't catch the F*#King ball" would be clear and concise communication.
BLWizzRanger
Sorry, not directed to you, but when I read this, the hoky-poky song popped in my head. Put your right hand in, put your right hand out, put both hands in and extended them out....and do the hoky po
noumpere
Which is why I continue to recommend the full safe sign with a verbal “no” ( or no catch— but be sure it can’t be interpreted as “catch”— or “ball’s on the ground “—I really don’t like that one.
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