This thread is about what expectations players and their parents have regarding the “College baseball experience”. It was triggered by Swampboy’s post below in another thread:
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“What optimistic players and parents imagine as a "normal" college baseball career is extremely rare. Very, very few players earn regular playing time early, stay healthy, become an increasingly significant contributor to the team, avoid the upheaval of a coaching change, remain on the roster for four years, and graduate with a marketable degree.
The rate of attrition--from injury, cuts, lack of playing time, relentless internal competition, merciless conditioning sessions, non-renewed scholarships, fatigue, lost sense of baseball as "fun", new coaches wanting their own players, old coaches repenting of their own recruiting decisions, academic pressure, financial pressure, changed life plans, conduct/attitude problems--is astounding.”
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So I asked my son last night “did your college baseball experience turn out the way you thought it would?” I just sat back and listened.
To paraphrase his response it was more or less "expect the unexpected" - both in positive and negative ways.
He first mentioned playing time and said that he did not expect to play much in his Freshmen year, and he did. (both pitching and hitting) Based on his Freshmen year he expected to play even more in his Soph year and end up in the 3 or 4 hole…….and he didn’t. (I think he played maybe 20-25%, a freshmen wonderboy took "his" spot, plus he also decided not to pitch) He worked hard over the summer and decided to pitch again, but was not too sure how it would work out, but he was determined to be a major contributor in the field. He was one of the better hitters in the fall and was slotted as the starting DH and for spot OF starts. Based on his hitting his pitching coach said “let’s just keep throwing on the side and we’ll spot use you”. He starts the season and basically stinks for the first 5 games and then starts to get his swing going and breaks his finger. This more or less wipes out his hitting for the year, so he starts to throw again. (finger was his glove hand) Of course now he has to work his way into the head coaches view, but he is throwing really hard and doing well in scrimmages, except many times the head coach is not there when he was pitching. So to make a long story short, he probably has the best “stuff” on the team but is getting limited innings. He is not too happy about this but remains a team leader and motivator.
In the conference championship game, they bring him in in the third inning as the starter is not getting it done and he ends up shutting down one of the better hitting teams in the West. He finishes the game and is on the bottom of the dog pile for the conference championship. This pretty much wipes out any bad thoughts he had on the season. Regionals come and same thing happens, except suddenly he is “wonderboy pitcher” to the head coach, and is brought in after our number 1 struggled during our first game (we lost) but he shuts down one of the best hitting teams in the country and gave them a chance to win the game.
On the personal/academic side, he has done better than I expected, but he is really disciplined and pretty much goes to bed at 2-3AM every night, and functions on 5-6 hours of sleep during the week. He is a gym rat and works out a lot, but since he is at a D3 he will miss practice at least once a week due to school conflicts. (but always gets his work in on the side) He has always been on the travel team, but I have seen a lot of kids who also deserved to be (IMO) not be on it. Sometimes he wishes he was not on the mid-week travel squad as those trips are a grind.
He has gone from having a great season, to a cra ppy one, to a cra ppy season, that got cra ppier and suddenly was perfect. He still has one more year to go and we will see what happens.
I have seen some of his friends play at major D1's and are now playing pro ball, I have seen many go off to D1's, transfer back to a JC and then off to another D1, with some sticking, and more (based on some of the summer league rosters I looked at) still searching for yet another place to play. One good friend of his I thought would have been drafted and was not and (I think) will be back for his Sr season at a powerhouse program.
I am curious to hear other stories.
For parents and players going off for their first year, baseball has so many variables that make it unpredictable, and then to add in all of the variables that college brings, I think it is pretty phenomenal that a players college career ends up the way he envisioned.