Skip to main content

Daulton Hopkins Ambidextrous Pitcher

Daulton Hopkins
Daulton Hopkins

Born: July 1, 1996
High School: Desert Christian High School (Class of 2014)
Hometown: Tucson, AZ

Club Team: KFC POST 59 (2013), Spartans AZ 18U (2012)

Age: 17
Height/Weight: 5'9", 140 lbs.
Positions: OF, LHP/RHP
Bats: Both
Throws: Both, Left-hand dominant

Daulton Hopkins is a natural lefty who can pitch with both arms. He is a switch pitcher and left-handed outfielder for Desert Christian High School in Tucson, Arizona.

Accolades
Arizona Coaches Association First-team, Arizona Republic Second-team (D-IV), Arizona Daily Star First-team (D-IV), Honorable Mention Southern-AZ



Daulton Hopkins Stats

Senior 2014
.318 BA, .483 OBP, 15 RBI, 28 Runs (25 games)

Junior 2013
.482 BA, .605 OBP, 24 RBI, 50 Runs (30 games)
3.04 ERA in 23 IP, 5-1 record, 20 BB,16 K

Sophomore 2012
.304 BA, .506 OBP, 11 RBI, 20 Runs

Freshman 2011
.309 BA, .460 OBP, 21 RBI, 20 Runs




Desert Christian High School Baseball - beRecruited.com


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pitchers Glove Rules - Size and Color

What are the rules on a pitchers glove? According to the official baseball rules, a pitchers glove can be up to 12 inches in size , of any weight , and any color except white or gray as long as it is not distracting.  The Akadema ABX-00 glove, pictured above, is 12 inches,  solid black and is not distracting according to local umpires. Little League Rules Gray glove is not allowed for pitching  White glove is not allowed for pitching Little League Rule 1.14: Each fielder, other than the first baseman and the catcher may wear a glove not more than 12 inches long nor more than 7 3/4 inches wide, measured from the base of the thumb crotch to the outer edge of the glove. The glove may be of any weight. Little League Rule  1.15 (a) : The pitcher's glove may not, exclusive of the piping, be white or light gray, nor, in the judgment of an umpire, distracting in any manner. (source: Little League Baseball Rules Regarding Bats and Gloves ) Off

Fastball Velocity - How fast do kids throw?

How fast does a Little League pitcher throw? The average fastball is between 50-60 mph for a  pitcher in the Majors division of Little League (11-13 yo). Pitchers in the Little League World Series throw fastballs 60-70+ mph. Only a few pitchers touched 70+ mph in 2015 and 2016. One man-child hit 81 mph on the radar. This velocity is almost unhittable from 46 feet  and extremely rare for a 13 year old. #18 RHP Carlos Gonzalez - Panama 79-81 mph fastball  105 mph MLB equivalent reaction time #18 RHP Jaekyeong Kim - South Korea 75-76 mph fastball #19 RHP Ryan Harlost - Mid-Atlantic, Endwell, NY 71-74 mph fastball Threw a complete game to win the 2016 Little League World Series Loreto Siniscalchi , a 6'1" pitcher from Canada, threw in the mid 70s and completely dominated the hitters from Japan.  He led Team Canada to its first victory over Japan in 18 years. Big right-hander Isaiah Head from Kentucky threw 70-73 mph fastballs. His record was 3-0, 12 I

Baseball Glove Options for Switch Pitchers

Custom made  Mizuno ambidextrous glove Looking for a glove for a switch pitcher? Before spending hundreds of dollars on a custom glove, please think about age of the player and how much time they will spend pitching. Here are glove options for ambidextrous pitchers, based on age: Age 3-5 Kids don't pitch at this age. They should be learning the proper way to throw. Young kids should try catching the ball with two hands. Use tennis balls or foam balls for throwing. Forget about the low quality plastic glove - it's in the landfill within a year. Gloves are awkward for young kids. If they learn two hand catch when they are young and continue with the skill, they will do well fielding balls when they are older. Learning to throw with both arms is easy at this stage. If a child can throw with either hand when they are three-years-old, it doesn't mean that they are talented or ambidextrous - it just means that they are a typical kid. Gloves:  Buy a small leath