"The media feature is great! I can easily share photos and videos from practices and games with parents and players."
Free Tool
Move from ad-hoc drills to structured plans your staff can run consistently.
Used by youth and club coaches worldwide
Define one clear objective per training block.
Use a repeatable flow from warm-up to competitive finish.
Align coaches and assistants around the same plan.
When each session has a clear goal and structure, players develop faster. Coaches who plan ahead spend less time explaining and more time coaching.
A shared practice plan means your staff runs stations without waiting for instructions. Everyone sees the schedule, drill objectives, and time blocks before arriving at the field.
Pick a session focus, add time blocks for warm-up, drills, and scrimmage, then share it with your coaching staff.
Start with a clear session goal (e.g., ground ball fundamentals). Break the time into blocks: warm-up, focused drill work, competitive reps, and a short cooldown. CoachBall lets you build this structure once and reuse it across the season.
Most youth baseball practices run 90 minutes to two hours. The key is keeping every block short enough to hold attention. CoachBall's time blocks help you stay on schedule so nothing drags.
Yes. Every coach and assistant on your team sees the same plan in real time. No group texts, no printed sheets that get left in the car.
No. Save any practice as a template and adjust it for next week. Most coaches build three or four base sessions and rotate them with small tweaks.
CoachBall supports multiple teams per account. Each team gets its own practice plans, schedules, and roster, so nothing overlaps.
Start with one session plan and keep improving each week.
"The media feature is great! I can easily share photos and videos from practices and games with parents and players."
"CoachBall has helped me coach my team better. The insights I get help me make better decisions."
"The player profiles are super detailed! I can now see exactly how each player develops and where they need help."