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I'm at a bit of a crossroad right now. My varsity baseball coach told me that I wasn't talented enough to play at a high level, but he was going to keep me on the team anyways.  We just recently had two scrimmages, one that I missed because of the SAT, and the second one never played in. I feel that I am better than the players he put in, defensively and offensively.  He is putting in sophomores over me, a junior. granted, I am on the smaller side of builds,  but i don't let that affect my play.  I play as hard as i can for how small i am.  I have considered quitting baseball for my school, but since i don't play travel and don't have much money for showcases.  i want to play college baseball and hopefully further if that is where my talents and dedication take me.  i have put myself in the oufield, where i thought i would play, but with 7 others, 4 seniors and 3 sophomores, out there, im not sure i will see much, if any, play time.  i have also been a pitcher since i started playing higher level baseball, but have not been able to prove myself because i haven't gotten the chance.  i love pitching really more than anything else on the diamond, but i rely on my command and that is not what my coach seems to want.  he wants the big, powerful players, at every spot. i really want to go as far as i can, and i think pitching is my way to g. does anyone have any advice on what i should do?

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There is the possibility you’re not good enough. But you have to start asking yourself questions.

How badly do you want it? Do you prefer to play or do you want it?
Are you the first to arrive and the last to leave every practice? Do you compete in every practice like it’s the 7th game of the World Series?

What are you doing in the off-season to improve your skills? What are you doing in the off-season to improve yourself physically? Have you made yourself as physically as big, strong and fast as you can be?

You don’t get to college ball on a prayer. You have to put yourself in the right place to gain exposure. If you’ve thought about quitting high school ball you don’t have the motivation to play college ball. It sounds more like you prefer it than want it.

The coach told you you’re not good enough. Did you ask him what you need to improve to earn a position?

You haven’t had the chance as a pitcher? Who is stopping you from improving your velocity? Your mechanics? Do you even know if you have quality mechanics? If you show up throwing harder and with better command than other pitchers on the sidelines you will be put in the game.

Okay @landonb08, what is your plan?  You've shared what your coach said, and he sounds like a lot of high school coaches I've known over the years.  He's challenging you and he's probably challenging others on the team to compete for playing time.   That is what he is supposed to do to motivate you to get better.   What are you going to do to prove him wrong?  As my youngest son's hs coach used to say all the time...."figure it out".

If you've spent any time on HSBaseballWeb there are many, many stories of guys who find a way and refuse to succumb to what others think.   My oldest played on a stud national team back in the day, and all the players were recruited from top D1 schools in the area.   My son's teammate was a smallish kid, and the last to be recruited from this travel team and he was kind of an afterthought at best.  Years later, he led his D1 school in homeruns and was drafted junior year.   Before he got drafted, he and my son were the only two left playing college baseball from this elite national travel team.   They were both the last to be recruited from that travel team.  You've got to believe in yourself, work hard,  and find a way to get on that field.  Attitude is everything in life, and this is no different.

JMO, and Good luck! 

Look up "Anatoly"  He is a small guy but can lift a ton.  He puts others to shame.  You said you are small.  Get strong!  That is where your power and velocity will come from.  Like others have said, "how bad do you want it".  My oldest thought he wanted it bad, until he realized it meant giving up a lifestyle he wasn't ready to give up.  My middle son has completely changed his eating habits.  In addition to working out, you will need to eat lots of protein and calories.

Good luck!

If the coach is keeping you on the team, use the practices and games to work as hard as you can to improve, and study the game.  And for sure, try to have a conversation with him, outside of practice, to ask where he thinks you need to improve.  Can you talk to assistant coaches?  Do you stay after practice to hit in the cages, throw, field?  Injuries happen.  Be ready.

You don't say whether you do workouts, lessons, practice outside of the school team - but, right or wrong, that's kind of expected at most high schools.  Do you play in the summer at all (you said "not travel")?

I understand that it's mystifying sometimes why a coach plays certain players and not others.  My son was confused about a lot of things when he was in HS.  Later he was an assistant coach for one year.  He said now he understood and agreed with all the coach's decisions back then.

Generally speaking, coaches are trying to win, and they play the players they think will help them - but it's not always obvious what that means.  Maybe some are better contact hitters?  Maybe they hit the ball harder than you do?  Coaches always want pitchers - but probably he knows more about what kind of pitching succeeds at your HS varsity level.

"Playing in college" can mean many things.  Do you mean that you want to be on a team, even if you never play?  There are many colleges that take as many as 50+ players (i.e. paying students) - these are D2, D3, NAIA, etc.  Only nine play at anyone time, though.  It still could be a good experience, if you like being around baseball.

Just like everyone else, you’re only in control of your work ethic and choices. Neither life nor baseball is fair in the distribution of gifted attributes and lucky/unlucky breaks.

If baseball is a passion, then out work everyone else and use being overlooked as fuel – but there’s never a guarantee that translates to getting on the varsity field. However, if do you learn to outwork your competition, use setbacks as fuel while making good choices, that can translate to a foundation for lifelong success.

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