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I just read the following article on College Baseball Insider. Interesting thoughts from this past season's national champions.

http://www.collegebaseballinsider.com/

Recruiting athletes

By Dan Spencer

Oregon State Associate Head Coach

Dan Spencer is entering his 11th season as an assistant at Oregon State. The associate head coach and pitching coach of the Beavers, Spencer has been instrumental in helping the Beavers to back-to-back College World Series appearances and the 2006 National Championship. He joins CollegeBaseballInsider.com for the 2007 season.

Just yesterday, I was with Coach Casey at a homecoming event, standing with four players from last year’s Oregon State University National Championship team.

As Pat was talking, I was preparing myself to be asked to say something. In the attempt to come up with something clever, I got to thinking about the four guys who were standing with us, and I thought about the first time I had seen each of them play.

Cole Gillespie, 2006 Pac-10 player of the year and our starting left-fielder, had been a shortstop/pitcher at West Linn High School in Oregon. Tyler Graham, our starting center fielder, was a shortstop at Great Falls High School in Montana. Shea McFeely, our starting third baseman, was a shortstop/pitcher at Federal Way High School in Washington. Ryan Gipson, who started at second base for us in 2005 and played right-field for us in Omaha in 2006, was a shortstop at Shasta Community College prior to coming to Oregon State University. To take it a step further, our starting catcher, Mitch Canham, was a right-fielder/first baseman/third baseman in high school and had not caught in a game until he caught his first in college.

The point is that baseball is a game played from the inside out. A team is only as good as the guys who are playing in the middle of the field: pitchers, catchers, shortstop and center field.

If this premise is true, then high school teams should play their best athletes in the middle of the field, and the bulk of your scholarship money should be spent up the middle.

The shortstop is in the middle of everything: He should know what the responsibilities of the other infielders are and also display leadership qualities inherent to the position. If this player moves to another position, they take those same leadership qualities and a better understanding of the overall game than would a player who has played left field his whole life.

Because college baseball is limited to 11.7 scholarships, it behooves clubs to recruit and develop guys who can play more than one position. I have found that most players are more than willing to change positions if it means there is a chance to play or to get out from behind an All-American. If a player is unwilling to move, he is probably not the kid you were looking for in the first place - putting his personal agenda ahead of the good of the club.

Baseball is a skill sport. Great athletes are not necessarily great baseball players. The key is finding the athlete who can either already hit or shows you enough aptitude that you think he can be developed offensively. The problem is that everyone in college and professional baseball is looking for the same player. The reality is that the average college hitter who can run and play multiple positions is more valuable than the average college hitter who can’t run and plays one position. One more obvious advantage is the more good athletes you can play on defense, the more balls they will get to. Consequently, your pitchers will do a better job of pitching to contact and in theory be more efficient.

A program’s overall philosophy is a combination of its recruiting, practice and game-day plan. If you wish to play fast, then you must recruit fast players. If you are hoping to have power throughout your lineup, then you must recruit power, maybe at the expense of another tool. Whatever your choice of play, the key is to have a plan and to recruit and practice towards it.

There is no blueprint for winning, and there is no one plan that is better than another, but there must be one consistent philosophy that every team member understands and is working toward.
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Very nice article. No wonder they played so well last season. The coaches had a plan, and they fit the necessary athletes into that plan. That's the beauty of baseball, there are so many ways to win as long as the entire team is on the same wavelength.

As an side, this is an excellant lesson for youth players to learn. How many times have you seen an all star team with 9 shortstops and 10 pitchers. Kids immediately think that it is a bad thing to get moved to another position, but in reality it is 1.) the only way they are going to be on the field and 2.) the only way that the team has a chance to play winning baseball.
CD,
Terrific and very informative article.
I don't think I will forget the series when Oregon St came to Stanford in 2005. After years of domination by Stanford each trip to Palo Alto, that team came with a tenacity that you could detect during the pregame. Their team speed was spectacular(different than any other team, including Stanford) and they were extremely effective with it and executed with perfection. Constant pressure on the opposition for 9 innings.
I like the comment about having a plan, whether it be based on power, speed, etc. Might be a little tongue in cheek!!! From what I have seen, they will beat whatever power you recruit.
Our son plays with an Oregon St player drafted in 2004. To this day, he says that kid plays the game harder, day in and day out, than anyone in the organization.
Last edited by infielddad
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Ah yes, Infielddad, Point well taken...I understand I will be taking my ear plugs, my prozac, and sitting in the outfield...a practice well mastered in dealing with youth ball!

...or maybe I'll just...

...On the other hand, if you can't beat 'em....

Just kidding...I understand it' a heck of a program, and I'm looking forward to the trip...

Cool 44
Last edited by observer44
quote:
Those are words, perhaps, not too easily shared????


You got it! Wink

quote:
O44: Was thinking about going to Corvallis this year to watch older against OSU...infielddad: I think justbb might have some "other" words about that idea!!!


Well, as long as O44 doesn't wear his son's team logo or colors, he should be fine. Otherwise, the OF seats are highly recommended.
Last edited by justbaseball
quote:
Very nice article. No wonder they played so well last season. The coaches had a plan, and they fit the necessary athletes into that plan. That's the beauty of baseball, there are so many ways to win as long as the entire team is on the same wavelength.

As an side, this is an excellant lesson for youth players to learn. How many times have you seen an all star team with 9 shortstops and 10 pitchers. Kids immediately think that it is a bad thing to get moved to another position, but in reality it is 1.) the only way they are going to be on the field and 2.) the only way that the team has a chance to play winning baseball.


Spinedoc,

You bring up a great point, and I have a story to prove your point, but it was a dad that thought it was a bad thing that his kid wasn't playing SS.

I coached a 12U team several years ago when my son was that age. We had a kid on the team that was a really good athlete and had always played SS growing up. I needed him to play 3rd base one game and penciled him in there on the lineup sheet. His dad did our books and when he saw that I had him at third, he got all puffed up, got his stuff, picked up his chair and went home.

Funny thing is........now he's a junior on my son's HS team.........and is now a full time 3rd baseman. Hasn't played SS in a couple of years now.
Last edited by Old Pitcher
I had a kid several years ago that really wanted to be a catcher. And his dad did as well. I moved him to left field because the kid could hit and was very adequate in the field. He was not the best option behind the plate on our team. He was not a college level catcher and was just an average HS catcher at best. But he was very good at the plate and could play the outfield very well. He got several scholey offers as an outfielder but turned them down because he wanted to catch. One school offered him some money and said they would give him a shot behind the plate. He played four years at this mid major d1 program. He was the bull pen catcher for four years and got no defensive innings in four years. I guess they proved me wrong after all.
That is a very good and accurate article about the realities of college baseball. I remember a period of a couple years when I had guys who were high school shortstops scattered all over the field. Another period of time had my team littered with guys who were high school catchers playing all over the place.

The first player I had who was drafted came in as a high school shortstop, played nine positions in four years of college baseball, and spent most of his senior season behind the plate, getting drafted as a catcher but then playing mostly three different infield positions in the minors.
For anyone that is planning on going to an OSU baseball game, you better get your tickets early.
They were sold out for nearly every game last year.
They do not keep the outfield seats during the regular season.

I looked on Craig's list last year for tickets to the UW vs OSU series. There were over one hundred people trying to find tickets.

The UW Friday game pitted Lincecum versus Buck. We were told they only had 8 no-shows for the sold out game.

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