Best / Fastest way to break in a Baseball glove?

leeland

Diamond Member
Dec 12, 2000
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I have looked online and am looking for personal experience here...

I have a young son who is starting t-ball and got him a new glove...I never played BB so I don't know the trade secrets on how to break in the glove...

Any help is appreciated!


Thanks,
Lee
 

brblx

Diamond Member
Mar 23, 2009
5,499
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iirc we would put a ball in the glove, rubberband it tight, and put it in the oven on real low heat.

i've heard of oiling or something but i don't think we ever put anything on our gloves. play is the only way to get a real full break-in, but the oven is a start and will give it some shape and start the crease.
 

Cuda1447

Lifer
Jul 26, 2002
11,757
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71
I used to put a ball in the glove and rubber band it overnight. That and use it. Throw the ball around with your son in the backyard!
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
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I just played catch with it. You can use glove oil to, but just keep a ball in it and play catch as much as possible.
 

Ronstang

Lifer
Jul 8, 2000
12,493
18
81
Like the others have said you rubber band a ball in the pocket whenever you are not using it. I used to oil mine down a first.
 

brblx

Diamond Member
Mar 23, 2009
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also set heavy shit on it (with nothing in it). i dunno about you guys, but i liked my glove to fold perfectly in half (ish) and basically be a leather pancake when laying down. if it wants to spring open at all, it isn't broken in.
 

anxi80

Lifer
Jul 7, 2002
12,294
2
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baseball+rubberband. i used to put that combo underneath my mattress and sleep on it. also taking the ball and throwing it into the glove. like others have mentioned playing catch with it too.
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
1,688
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also set heavy shit on it (with nothing in it). i dunno about you guys, but i liked my glove to fold perfectly in half (ish) and basically be a leather pancake when laying down. if it wants to spring open at all, it isn't broken in.

??

Fold in half? No. The glove should have a shape similar to your hand, and should curl around the ball. Having a glove crease makes it much more difficult to catch the ball.

The exceptions to this are the catchers and first baseman's mitts, which will develop a minor crease due to the excessive padding needed. But even these mitts should be mostly rounded, not creased.
 

Ballatician

Golden Member
Dec 6, 2007
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Glove oil plus many tight rubber bands with a ball in the pocket (webbing).

Sleeping on it under the mattress helps too.

I don't think kids at the t-ball level can really take advantage of the difference but good luck!
 

brblx

Diamond Member
Mar 23, 2009
5,499
2
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??

Fold in half? No. The glove should have a shape similar to your hand, and should curl around the ball. Having a glove crease makes it much more difficult to catch the ball.

The exceptions to this are the catchers and first baseman's mitts, which will develop a minor crease due to the excessive padding needed. But even these mitts should be mostly rounded, not creased.

heresy, round gloves suck, you want that shit floppy.
 

lxskllr

No Lifer
Nov 30, 2004
59,061
9,449
126
I always used boiled linseed oil in a new glove, plus rubber bands as stated above. Nothing beats actual use though. While watching TV or something, work the leather with your hands. Bend it, massage it, get it loosened up.
 

Blackjack200

Lifer
May 28, 2007
15,995
1,688
126
heresy, round gloves suck, you want that shit floppy.

Wikipedia seems to think it matters which position you play:

Outfielder's gloves are usually quite long with deep pockets, to help with catching fly balls on the run or in a dive, and to keep outfielders from having to bend down as far to field a ground ball. These gloves typically have 12- to 12.75-inch patterns, measured from wrist to the tip. They are frequently worn-in differently than those of infielders, with a flatter squeeze rather than the infielder's rounded style.


I always used boiled linseed oil in a new glove, plus rubber bands as stated above. Nothing beats actual use though. While watching TV or something, work the leather with your hands. Bend it, massage it, get it loosened up.

This is most important. I'm naturally fidgety, so I'm always curling the fingers or pushing or flexing or bending the glove in some way. My gloves are soft as a baby's bottom.
 
Mar 10, 2005
14,647
2
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also set heavy shit on it (with nothing in it). i dunno about you guys, but i liked my glove to fold perfectly in half (ish) and basically be a leather pancake when laying down. if it wants to spring open at all, it isn't broken in.

i used to oil the hell out of it and have my mom park her car on it.
 

alfa147x

Lifer
Jul 14, 2005
29,307
105
106
It's fucking t-ball, he just needs to work it loose till his son can actually use it

(When I played t-ball my glove was WAY to stiff for me to even use :\)
 

brblx

Diamond Member
Mar 23, 2009
5,499
2
0
who even plays teeball? :p

peewee with adult slow pitch started at 5 around here. at i think fast pitch started at seven and kids started pitching around then or maybe a year later.

but a kid still needs a good glove to catch well. it sucks seeing a kid with that sad perfectly round, stiff, immobile cup of a glove on his hand. he's a kid, why make it harder for him? it's like putting mittens on a retard.
 

oogabooga

Diamond Member
Jan 14, 2003
7,806
3
81
Glove oil plus many tight rubber bands with a ball in the pocket (webbing).

Sleeping on it under the mattress helps too.

I don't think kids at the t-ball level can really take advantage of the difference but good luck!

These are relatively well liked methods, though I personally didn't use glove oil.

As said, use is really the best way, better start playing catch ;)
 

Cdubneeddeal

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2003
7,473
3
81
When I was younger I used glove oil then used the ball to work it in. Then take the ball, out it on the glove then sleep on it. I never used a rubber band.
 

Linflas

Lifer
Jan 30, 2001
15,395
78
91
Glove oil plus many tight rubber bands with a ball in the pocket (webbing).

Sleeping on it under the mattress helps too.

I don't think kids at the t-ball level can really take advantage of the difference but good luck!

This is how I remember doing mine when I was a kid. Wasn't the most comfortable nights sleep but at that age I really didn't care.
 

kthroyer

Member
Jan 9, 2004
159
0
0
Bought my sons at Play it Again sports. Already broken in. First one we bought was brand new, and a 5 year old will never be able to break it in by playing catch, because they can't catch. Just don't buy one of the tiny ones that a ball can barely fit in, they are always too stiff and essentially useless.