cabbagedad posted:I think baseball teaches a lot of the lessons necessary specific to the mid-tier player in the midst of the recruiting process...
You will fail (get a lot of "no"s and no response) many times. You gotta be able to flush and get the next one, each time giving full effort and expecting to succeed.
If you keep working hard (and smart), good things will happen.
Get good "coaching" regarding your strengths and weaknesses. (get honest, qualified neutral party to evaluate so you are fishing in the right pond).
Passion and persistence matter.
Don't just step in the box and hope good things happen. Have a good, focused plan.
See the whole field.
Get a lot of quality reps - one of the most common mistakes I see with mid-tier players/parents in the recruiting process is the tendency to just follow one lead and wait. There is a little bit of interest shown or a plan to attend a camp at a future date and they think that their work is done for now and they should just wait to see what comes of that one interested party or that one event. Once the player is in recruiting mode, he has to continue to hit from all angles, expecting those several "no's", no responses and string-alongs and having several other logs on the fire.
As usual cabbagedad has some good stuff here. " Don't just step in the box and hope good things happen. Have a good, focused plan." I asked my son this question during his Jr. college year. Aside from the usual depends on runners on base, outs, score, inning ,pitcher's best pitch, etc., he said his mentality is " I'm better than the pitcher, the question isn't if I'm going to hit the ball, rather it is how hard I am going to hit it, how far it goes, and how many bases I will get. If the pitcher gets me out, hats off to him, but most likely I swung at a marginal or bad pitch/strike (sorry all pitchers and dads out there). A bit cocky? - yes. Point is all hitters should have that type of confidence when stepping in the box, and all pitchers think and believe the opposite. I've seen many hitters as they stand in the box their body language seems to say I hope I get a hit, or I hope I don't K. Good luck...