1. Field of Invention
The invention relates to sports equipment, and more particularly to equipment that enables a player to practice striking a ball in a manner similar to actual play of a game.
2. Background Information
In many sports the object is to kick, hit or otherwise strike a ball. The skill of the player in such sports is usually directly related to the player's ability to efficiently and repeatedly strike the ball accurately and with appropriate force. To do this well requires extensive and repeated practice. When a player wishes to practice, however, he or she often finds that it is inconvenient or difficult to recruit another person to throw or otherwise deliver the ball so that the player can practice his or her hitting or kicking. To that end a number of different devices have been developed to enable a single person to practice hitting or kicking without the assistance of any other person. Typical such devices are described and claimed in prior U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,296,582 and 6,514,161.
The more significant of these device is of the type shown in the U.S. Pat. No. 6,514,161 patent in which the ball is tethered to a single vertical pole with the tethers being located at a height appropriate for hitting the ball with a bat as in baseball or softball or swatting the ball with a racquet as in tennis, handball or squash or at a height appropriate for use for kicking the ball as in soccer. For brevity herein, the present invention will usually be described in the embodiment appropriate for baseball or softball batting practice, and will be referred to as a “batting” practice device. It will be understood, however, that this description is for convenience only, and is not limiting, such that the device may be used for practice for a wide variety of various ball striking games, whether the ball is batted, kicked, swatted or struck with a player's hand.
It has been found that with the prior art batting devices, including those shown in the two patents identified above, the service life of the tether and ball portion of the device is often unduly shortened by fraying and breaking of the tether cord, particularly where it is joined to the ball positioner. It has also been found that when the ball it is misstrike additional stresses are placed on the tether cord and on the ball positioner such that the wear on the tether cord is increased. It will be recognized that this is a serious problem since misstriking of the ball occurs quite frequently, as one would expect for a device whose purpose is to allow inexperienced and less experienced batters practice their batting strokes in order to be able to improve their batting skills. When the batting devices are in almost constant use for prolonged periods, as is common for equipment owned and used by sports teams such as school and amateur baseball or softball teams, the misstriking of the ball plus the stresses inherently arising at the connection between the ball positioner and the tether can easily result in the tether portion of the batting device having to be replaced at frequent intervals.
It would therefore be of significant value if the ball striking device could be improved to reduce the stresses on the tether that arise not only from repeated normal use but also from the effects of the ball being repeatedly misstrike, so that the service life of each individual tether unit could be substantially increased.
The present invention is of an improved ball striking practice device or apparatus, in which a ball tethered to a pole can be struck by a player with a bat or racquet or can be kicked by the player, and by virtue of being tethered will spiral rapidly into the pole and then the tether will resile in an outward spiral, bringing the ball rapidly back to its previous radially outward position where it can be struck or kicked by the player again, with the cycle repeating for as long as the player wishes to continue. The invention herein is of improvements to this apparatus, such that service life of the tether is substantially extended. One aspect of the invention comprises providing a unique flat triangular structure for the ball positioner such that the tether cord prior to entering the ball or upon exiting from the ball is disposed in straight lines to the points at which the ends of the cord are attached to the pole, such that previously debilitating stresses in the cord are eliminated, thus extending the life of the cord.
Further, because the improved ball positioner of the present invention maintains the cord in straight line configuration, the cord material is not restricted to fabric materials which are easily frayed and broken in use. Thus another aspect of the present invention is that the cord is a flexible metal strand, preferably made of steel or aluminum wire. It is also preferred that the wire be sheathed commonly with an elastomeric or polymeric sheathing material, to protect the metal strand from ambient weather such as rain.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is the construction of the flat triangular ball positioner. It may be made from a flexible, tough elastomeric material that can absorb direct strikes when a batter or kicker misses the ball in a practice session, and which can also absorb the rapid and abrupt changes in direction and motion as the tether wraps and unwraps around the pole in response to striking of the ball. More preferably, however, the positioner will be made of a flexible, strong fabric material, commonly a web material of the type used for heavy-duty belting, outdoor fabric products and the like.
Yet another aspect of the invention is that provision is made for the cord to traverse through the ball in a direction perpendicular to the path of the striking device so that the cord reverses direction in a loop that is at a point on the ball furthest from the intended impact point of the striking device. This minimizes the adverse effect of a misstrike of the ball. The loop of the cord preferably will be seated in a recess in the ball or an insert can be seated in a recess in the ball and the cord seating in a recess in the insert. This also minimizes the effect of the presence of the loop on the player's striking of the ball in a practice session.
All of these aspects of the invention provide a unique apparatus that is ideally suited for use as a striking practice device for sports such as baseball, softball, soccer, tennis, squash, handball and any other sport in which a ball is batter, kicked, swatter, or otherwise struck, particularly those in which the ball is frequently struck hard.
Therefore, in an embodiment the invention is of a ball striking practice apparatus which comprises a strikable ball mounted on a cord; a pole to which the ball is tethered by the cord; and a ball positioner mounted on the cord; the ball positioner being disposed on the cord between the ball and the pole, and comprising a generally flat triangular resilient and integral member having routing means on two sides thereof to route the cord between the ball and the pole in a substantially straight path; whereby the ball may be repeated struck causing the cord to repeatedly wind around and resile from the pole for extended periods without imparting undue stress within the cord.
In another embodiment the invention is of a ball striking practice apparatus which comprises a strikable ball slidably mounted on a cord; a pole to which the ball is tethered by the cord; a ball positioner slidably mounted on the cord, the ball positioner being disposed on the cord between the ball and the pole, and comprising a generally flat triangular resilient and integral member having routing means on two sides thereof to route the cord between the ball and the pole in a substantially straight path; the cord comprising a flexible metal wire; and the cord having two ends, each end being removably attached to the pole; whereby the ball may be repeated struck causing the cord to repeatedly wind around and resile from the pole for extended periods without imparting undue stress within the cord and the ends of the cord may be movably attached to the pole at different positions dependent upon the nature of the ball and its manner of being struck.
Other embodiments, aspects and details will be evident from the description below.
The device of the present invention is most easily understood by reference to the Figures of the drawings. The overall system is best illustrated in
The vertical pole 12 is mounted on a movable or fixed base 16 and extends to a height appropriate to permit adequate tethering of the ball 2 at the desired ball batting or kicking height. Typically the vertical pole 12 will be on the order of 6–9 ft (2–3 m) in height, depending on the space available for its use and the heights of the players who will be using the device. For the purpose of the present invention of the details of the pole construction are not critical, and the current device may be used with any suitable prior art pole or pole which may hereafter be constructed. To be suitable a pole 12 must have sufficient vertical height for the type of practice and the players involved, and must be capable of being located in a space with sufficient lateral clearance to allow the ball 2 to be properly struck and subsequently recoil after wrapping around the pole 12. The pole 12 must also be mounted or positioned in a location where there is ample room for the batter to stand and take a complete and normal swing at the ball 2. If the pole 12 is mounted on a movable stand 16 the stand must be sufficiently large and heavy to be stable so that the batter's striking of the ball 2 and the resulting torque caused by the ball's wrapping around the pole and then resiling can be resisted and the pole 12 maintained in a vertical orientation without tipping or unduly flexing.
The current invention resides in improvements to the ball's connection with the tether 18 and the ball positioner 14 and to the tether cord 4 and the ball positioner 14 themselves. These are all illustrated starting with
The ball positioner 14 itself will be made of a resilient material which has sufficient toughness and durability to maintain its integrity despite the repeated stresses of the striking impacts, the abrupt direction reversals and the resiling from being wrapped against the pole 12. The material should not be a rigid or heavy material such as a metal plate, however, since that will adversely affect the resiling motion which presents the ball 2 to the batter or the “feel” of the batter's striking of the ball. Some elastomeric materials will have suitable resiliency and integrity to be useful. Preferred, however, is for the ball positioner 14 to be made of a relatively stiff webbing fabric material 36, commonly of heavy fabric similar to the fabrics often used for belting, backpacks and other fabric articles which must withstand rigorous use. The edges of the two sides 24, 26 of the ball positioner 14 will be turned over to form channels 30, 32 as illustrated in
The ball positioner 14 is formed in the shape of a flat triangle with the sides 24, 26 of the triangle being aligned in a V-shape such that the each leg 4A, 4B of the tether cord 4 exits from the base 28 of the ball positioner 14 in substantially the same line that it maintained as it passed through the seamed passage 30, 32 on the sides of the ball positioner 14. The tether cord 4 will therefore be bent only at the apex 34 of the ball positioner 14 where the cord 4 enters its passage 6, 8 through the ball 2, and not at the base 28 of the ball positioner 14 where it exits toward the tether connections 20 on the pole. Having each leg 4A, 4B of the cord 4 exit in a straight line significantly reduces the stresses on the cord 4 when the ball 2 is hit. This is a distinct departure from the prior art, in which the two legs of the tether cord have passed through the ball positioner in a parallel alignment such that upon exiting at the base of the ball conditioner both legs of the cord immediately had to be bent away from each other to extend to be the tether connections the pole.
The tether cord 4 used is also different from that of the prior art cords. The prior art did not considered that a flexible metal cable could be used as the tether cord. We have discovered, however, that a flexible steel or aluminum wire or cable can be used if it is covered with a protective sheath 42 to minimize abrasion, fraying and bending. This is illustrated in
The cord 4 will be a continuous strand which runs from one tether anchor 20 to the other and passes through the ball 2 at the cord's central point. The passage through the ball without any insert is illustrated in
Preferably the recess 46 cut into the ball will be deep enough and configured so that when the cord 4 is looped through the ball as illustrated in
In use the player starts by holding the ball 2 and extending the tether 18 so that the ball 2 is at or close to the farthest point radially from the pole 12 that it can reach. The player then throws the ball 2 laterally in the horizontal plane in which the repeated batting, kicking, etc. is to occur. The tether cord 4 causes the ball to spiral inward as the tether wraps around the pole 12. When the tether 18 is fully wrapped onto the pole 12, its momentum causes it to reverse direction, resile and unwrap spirally with a speed only slightly diminished from the speed at which it spiraled inward. By correct timing of his/her swing or kick, the player strikes the ball 2 as the tether cord 4 becomes essentially fully unwrapped and extended and the ball 2 reaches its outmost radial position. This causes the ball 2 to again reverse direction and spiral inwardly at high speed, with the process being repeated as long as the player continues to strike the ball 2 at the end of each outward spiral. If the player should misstrike the ball 2 on any given kick or batting swing, the resulting motion of the ball will not be in the desired horizontal plane and the tether 18 will not effectively wrap around the pole and resile for the player's next kick or swing. The player must then stop the ball 2 and restart the process by again throwing the ball 2 in the horizontal plane and correctly hitting the ball 2 as it next resiles. It will be evident that as the player's proficiency improves, the ball may be regularly and repeatedly struck so that an extended and continuous practice session will result.
The effect of the present improved device is to allow such desirable practice sessions to be repeated many times without having to stop sessions to replace failed components of the device. This is valuable to both proficient and novice players, since each can concentrate on extended sessions of the appropriate levels of practice without being concerned that the repeated striking of the ball is causing undue fatigue in and premature failure of the equipment.
It will be evident that there are numerous embodiments of the present invention which, while not expressly set forth above, are clearly within the scope and spirit of the inventive concept. The description above is therefore to be considered exemplary only, and the scope of the invention is to be limited solely by the appended claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20050153795 A1 | Jul 2005 | US |