Why Position Matters More Than Brand
A shortstop's glove and an outfielder's glove are fundamentally different tools designed for different jobs. A shortstop needs to receive, transfer, and throw in under 1.5 seconds — requiring a small, shallow pocket with an open web. An outfielder needs to track fly balls and secure catches at full extension — requiring a longer, deeper pocket with a closed web.
Using the wrong glove for your position is like wearing basketball shoes to play soccer. You can do it, but you're handicapping yourself. Per Rawlings Pro Advisory Staff data, 90% of professional players use position-specific gloves, and the pattern is consistent from MLB down through college and travel ball.
Infield Gloves (SS, 2B, 3B)
Size: 11"–11.75" (youth: 10"–11.25")
Key features:
- Shallow pocket — Enables quick ball transfer for double plays
- Open web patterns — I-web, H-web, or modified trap. Allows dirt to fall through on ground balls
- Lightweight construction — Every gram matters when you need fast hands
Shortstop vs. Third Base: Shortstops typically go 11.25"–11.5" (need quicker transfer). Third basemen use 11.5"–11.75" (need more reach for hot corner line drives). Second basemen often prefer the smallest infield gloves (11"–11.25") for the fastest possible pivot on double plays.
Outfield Gloves
Size: 12.5"–12.75" (youth: 11.5"–12.5")
Key features:
- Deep pocket — Secures fly balls on basket catches and diving plays
- Closed web patterns — Trap, basket, or H-web. Provides a bigger catching surface and blocks sun
- Longer design — Extra reach for balls just beyond your glove hand
Catcher's Mitts
Size: 32.5"–34" (youth: 30"–32.5")
Key features:
- Heavily padded — Absorbs 70-90 mph pitches hundreds of times per game
- Closed, one-piece web — Creates a unified pocket with no flex points
- Rounded edges — No finger stalls, reducing finger injury risk
Critical for youth: An oversized catcher's mitt on a small hand is dangerous — the child can't control it. Match the mitt to hand size, not age. Per USA Baseball safety guidelines, proper mitt fit is the #1 factor in preventing catcher hand injuries.
Pitcher's Gloves
Size: 11.5"–12" (youth: 11"–11.75")
Key features:
- Closed web MANDATORY — Rules require pitchers use closed webs (basket or solid) to hide grip from batters
- Solid, uniform color — No white or gray (looks like the ball). Most leagues require solid color gloves for pitchers
- Comfort-focused — Pitcher uses the glove mostly for fielding bunts and comebackers, not every play
First Base Mitts
Size: 12"–13" (youth: 11.5"–12")
First base mitts are wider and longer than standard gloves, designed to scoop throws from the dirt and provide a big target for infielders. They use a single-post web and have extra padding in the heel.
Quick Size Chart by Position
| Position | Youth Size | Adult Size | Web Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pitcher | 11"–11.75" | 11.5"–12" | Closed (basket/solid) |
| Catcher | 30"–32.5" | 32.5"–34" | One-piece closed |
| First Base | 11.5"–12" | 12"–13" | Single post |
| Shortstop | 10.5"–11.25" | 11.25"–11.5" | I-web / H-web |
| Second Base | 10"–11" | 11"–11.25" | I-web |
| Third Base | 11"–11.5" | 11.5"–11.75" | H-web / cross |
| Outfield | 11.5"–12.5" | 12.5"–12.75" | Trap / H-web |
Budget Options
Common Mistakes
Sources & Further Reading
- Rawlings. "Position-Specific Glove Guide." rawlings.com/glove-guide
- Wilson. "A2000 Position Fitting." wilson.com/baseball/advisory-staff
- USA Baseball. "Equipment Safety Standards." usabaseball.com
- Baseball America. "MiLB Equipment Survey 2024." baseballamerica.com
- Just Gloves (YouTube). "Glove Sizing by Position — Complete Guide." youtube.com/@justgloves