I recently watched a rounders match (shoutout to our UK friends), and it hit me: Here’s why rounders doesn’t get enough credit—and how it can actually make you a better baseball player.
If you think rounders is just a kids' game or a lesser version of baseball, think again. 🧢
So next time someone says rounders is “just for fun,” ask them if they’ve ever tried to beat a throw from deep left field with a bare-handed tag at home. 😅 rounders baseball
In rounders, you can run even if the ball is caught on the fly — but you have to tag up. And with no leading off, every base advance comes down to reaction time and reading the defense. It’s like a baserunning drill on caffeine.
With only four bases (and a smaller diamond), defenders can’t hide. Every position is involved in almost every play. If you play outfield in baseball, rounders will teach you to anticipate and communicate faster than a seventh-inning stretch. I recently watched a rounders match (shoutout to
In rounders, you don’t need to crush the ball 400 feet. You just need to place it. That means hitters develop directional hitting — slapping the ball to the opposite field, dropping it into gaps, and using speed. Sound familiar? That’s small-ball baseball at its best.
Rounders won’t replace baseball. But it’s a fantastic cross-training tool — especially for younger players learning situational hitting, baserunning instincts, and defensive reads. 😅 In rounders, you can run even if
The bowler (pitcher) throws underhand, and the batter gets one delivery . No foul balls, no deep counts. This teaches instant decision-making and forces you to swing at hittable pitches. How many baseball hitters would improve if they had that kind of urgency?