In April, Las Vegas is paradise for ballplayers. In July, it’s 110° and your kid is sweating through the third inning. In December, you’re chasing wind-blown infield flies in 35° at 7am. Las Vegas weather is hostile to consistent baseball training — and that’s why the players who train indoors year-round are the ones who show up to spring tryouts looking like they’ve been working.
The Vegas Weather Problem
Every Las Vegas baseball coach knows the calendar. April through early June: gorgeous, perfect, packed. Mid-June through September: dangerous heat that closes outdoor practice for safety. October through November: brilliant. December through February: cold morning starts, wind that turns flyballs into knuckle pitches, and the occasional rain that washes out a week of fields.
That gives you, generously, five reliably hittable months out of twelve. The other seven are a coin flip. If your training plan depends on outdoor practice happening, you’ve baked seven months of “we’ll see” into your development.
What Happens to Players Who Train Through It
The hitters who walk into spring tryouts in February having put in real reps all winter look like a different species than the ones who took December and January off. Bat speed up. Mechanics ingrained. Eye-hand timing sharp. Confidence high.
It’s not that they’re more talented. It’s that they didn’t lose ground while the heat or the wind was an excuse. Indoor reps in November add up to a December and January advantage that shows up in February every single year.
“The hitters who use HitTrax for two months in the off-season are showing up to spring tryouts with bat speed numbers they couldn’t have faked.”— Powerhouse coaching staff
What “Indoor Year-Round” Actually Looks Like
At Powerhouse, “indoor year-round” means:
- Climate control. 72° in July, 72° in December.
- Game-distance tunnels. 70-foot full-distance cages — real reps, not foreshortened ones.
- Calibrated machines. ATEC, Jugs, fastpitch arc, slowpitch, baseball at every speed.
- HitTrax data. Measured exit velocity and launch angle so progress is real, not just feel.
- Open weekday evenings + weekends. When school’s out and outdoor practice was canceled, we’re open.
The result: a hitter who comes in twice a week from October through February takes ~50 sessions of real cage work. That’s measurable, repeatable, weather-proof development.
The Bottom Line
Las Vegas weather will only get you through five reliable months a year. The other seven, you either find a way to keep training or you accept a development gap. Indoor batting cages exist to close that gap.
Show up. Sign the waiver. Take your reps. The thermostat doesn’t care what’s outside.
