How do you get a player to just relax, be in the moment and not press -- especially at the plate? My guy has a sweet swing, what everybody says is elite bat speed. When he just let's things happens and trusts his ability, he does quite well. He's a little guy, but he has gap to gap power, a very high line drive rate, and a very low K rate. When's he's going good, he is constantly on base.
Sometimes, though, he presses and presses and tries to just kill the ball and is way out in front instead of letting the ball travel and get deep. Then instead of line drive after line drive, he ends up hitting lots of weak grounders to the pull side. He knows this about himself, but sometime he is just so geared up, so determined to crush the ball -- tries to "muscle it" rather than "drive" it is how his hitting coach describes it -- that he gets away from his game.
So the question is how do you get a player to just relax, be in the moment, take what comes, and trust his basic mechanics? I ask because he's about to play in PG/WWBA 18u National Championship. He's really psyched and has been working hard. But he definitely needs to learn to contain that excitement, not press, just relax and be in the moment. Pressing is what first got him into trouble this spring. Between the pressing and the bad back, it was not a productive spring. Don't want to see a repeat of that.
Any ideas? Pre-pitch rituals? Transcendental Meditation? Sports Psychologist? We'll try anything.