hsbbwebfan,
We all come here from different perspectives and backgrounds, which is why the HSBBW is such a wonderful melting pot of thoughts and ideas.
In terms of the mental aspects your son is expressing, that, to me, is a positive sign of his baseball maturity.
I have posted many, many times the belief that the mental adjustment of college baseball is at least as difficult as the baseball side, and probably more difficult.
Thank you for taking the time to clarify.
There are probably still two areas where I might question some early choices/decisions/conclusions that seem to have been reached. I preface these comments with my ready acknowledgment that you know your son's college/baseball and coaching experience better than I do and your son isn't mine. Take it or leave it, whichever you like but hopefully these thoughts come through in the spirit in which they are offered for both you as parents and your son as a student/athlete.
The first area I would "open" is whether a player with skills of the type you describe for your son
"needs to settle" on the college baseball front in exchange for a promising future. I think highly competitive student/athletes don't necessarily "settle" for anything but the very, very best they can give day in and day out.
If your son's mind set is he is "settling" for something rather than being challenged everyday to be the very best player/teammate he can become, each and every time he steps on a baseball field, I wonder how satisfying that will be.
I know it sounds corny, but Rudy does work in college sports. However, sometimes it is the players who rise up and their team becomes a Rudy.
If you would like a bit of history/recent example, please check on a player named Daniel Ward at Hendrix College. His first year, the team had 13 players, was in complete disarray, and went something like 3-37. By his senior year, they were playing in a DIII regional after winning the schools first conference baseball championship.
Student athletes like Daniel Ward can make a difference. Maybe your son is one like him.
The other opening I want to create is the option for you to support your son/encouraging him to develop and foster his coaching relationship, especially as it relates to these types of frustrations.
In another forum, there is thread about distance and how far away our son's went to college. The last game our son played within about 1,800 miles of home was his last HS/American Legion game.
He played for 8 years after that. The only games in those 8 years West of the Mississippi were in Texas, where he went to college.(Texas is West of the Mississippi, I think/hope.
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During that time, we continued our role as parents and baseball supporters. His coaches were the ones who saw him everyday. They saw what he did each AB, against each pitcher. His Fall ball was very much as you are describing, with mostly games, and any individual attention before and after practice. The player he became and the baseball and personal successes he achieved came from the mental and baseball coaching that took place elsewhere. The results could not have been better for him. To this day, he knows he did it on his own, in is way, making his choices.
Most DIII college coaches know and understand what physical and mental challenges and frustrations our son's experience, especially with demanding academics. DIII college coaches can truly make a difference when given that chance.
It is very, very clear how much you love your son and want to support him and help him.
While this was not easy when it was my turn some years back, my suggestion would be to support your son in going to his coaches to express his frustrations and to learn the adjustments, with his coaching staff.
He probably won't hear the same message he would get from his parents. But,hopefully, he will begin a process of communication which will help him identify what he needs to do to be more successful every day he competes in college baseball and to adjust to be able to do it.
Maybe your son will set an example, just like Daniel Ward, who would not compromise on anything and ended up with everything.