The Coach's Corner/Three Vital Elements | Print |  E-mail

There are three vital elements necessary to be successful at playing or

coaching baseball.

1. RESPECT THE GAME

2. WORK HARD

3. HAVE FUN! RESPECT THE GAME

You must respect how difficult the game is. Sure, you must show up prepared.

Get enough sleep, eat right and prepare correctly so that you have a chance to

succeed but you must also realize that this is a game of failure. Fail only 2 out of 3

times at the plate for your career and you'll end up in the Hall Of Fame. The player

that throws a tantrum because he struck out is not respecting the game. Babe Ruth

struck out over 3000 times. He ain't Babe Ruth.


The coach that yells at a player that boots a ground ball is not respecting the game.

I personally saw Ozzie Smith kick it 3 times in a game. So, how dare a coach yell at

a player for doing that which even the Wizard did. It is how a player deals with the

failures not the successes that will determine how many more failures he has. How

many times have you seen a player make an error and after the coach berates him,

then make 2 more? "E" coach! He got in the player's head. He made it much more

likely the player will not be able to "shake it off" but will "gator arm" the next one.

The coach did not respect the game.



WORK HARD

This is the easy one. Work hard but work smart. Practice having success. It is better

to take 10 perfect swings than 100 with little thought or consistency. I am very familiar

with some big time college programs that work their players to the point of exhaustion

daily, hundreds of defensive reps, with max intensity, each max effort, each timed with

a stopwatch. I assure you they would get far better results in the games if they were to

just take 20 to 30 ground balls a day focusing on the players executing correctly and

having success. If he boots one, see to it you hit him several "Sunday hops" in a row

to regain his confidence. More failure in the name of hard work is counterproductive.


HAVE FUN

This is the most often forgotten essential element in baseball. Baseball is a little boy’s

game that if you are lucky you can player into adulthood. Even Major League players

sometimes forget this. During an end of the season losing streak, Jeff Bagwell nixed the

idea of a team meeting because the only reason to have a meeting is to remind everyone

to relax and "this is not the time to relax". That is why Baggy was a choking dog when the

pressure was on! You are not playing the other team. You are playing only the ball. To the

ball, there are no big games. It is just a ball thrown over the plate. It is just a ball bouncing

along the ground. The player must execute as he has thousands of times before. He will

not do better by trying harder. He will, in fact, do far worse! All things being equal, If one team

is grim faced and fired up before the big game having gotten a rousing pre-game speech from

the coach and the other is loose, horsing around and laughing, guess which will play better.


THE COACH

www.tipsfromthecoach.com


ARCHIVES


Comments (0)Add comments

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

busy
 

Youth Sports Video

Gas Lites


Today in 1960, American

Football League plays 1st

game (Denver 13, Boston 10).