Originally Posted by CoachB25:
I have been very blessed to have access to some outstanding coaches in my time. My mentor won several hundred HS games. I used to get to talk to another coaching legend in our state. I have experienced just the opposite when talking to first year new coaches at 300 student HS. The one thing I have always marveled in is the differences in the ways that all of these guys think. Baseball is a great game that can be, "dumbed down" or a complex as you want to make it. That is a part of what makes the game so fun. I can watch a MLB game and manage my Cardinals in the way that I would have wanted in my head while seeing what those on the field do. Sometimes I'm right and some times I'm wroooo I'm wrooo I'm not right.
To me, everything’s in the perspective. The coach of our current team is looking at things very basically and simply because of the state of the program. 2 years ago that same coach at was an assistant on a team in the top 100 in the country, and the mindset was entirely different.
I remember when my boy was just old enough to swing a blowup bat. I toss him floating blowup balls and he’d try to figger out how to make that bat hit that ball. He learned to play catch as I’d sit on the floor and roll the ball to him. It would take him 2 or 3 tries to grab it, and once he did, it took a couple tries to even let it go, let alone throw it. That’s about as simple as it gets, but it was easy to see that every time we did it he was getting better at it, and slowly the game got more complex.
When I was a kid, most kids who had a favorite team weren’t thinking about all the mini-moves and micro-decisions the manager had to make. They knew 9 guys need to be in the lineup. They knew the guy who hits the most HRs will likely be in the #3 or 4 spot, and the weakest hitters would be at the bottom of the order. They also knew who played every position and who the best pitchers were, and from that they could easily make a lineup.
Unlike so many of today’s fans, just about every kid in our neighborhood had some kind of baseball board game where the players picked the teams, made the lineups, and had to use strategy to win the game. Mine was “All Star Baseball”. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Star_Baseball
I had leagues set up, made trades, played games, kept stats and standings, and even had a World Series at the end of the season. So by the time I started playing organized baseball, I already knew much more than the basics of the game, and that was “normal”. I don’t see that being true anymore. Many kids today never play baseball in any form other than organized ball where adults do everything as far as organization and administration, and kids who missed that growing up would of course not believe anyone other than a ML manager could possibly do even the most basic things needed to play a game. Like I said, it’s all in the perspective.