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One of my favorite topics….I’m a really good high school player, will I start at DI?...
This what I tell DI headed seniors…at least those who are open to reality…
Enjoy your moment, enjoy all the attention and the projections, enjoy your production, clip those articles,...project yourself mentally into that DI starting role….
For a short time…
Then you better start getting real ...Welcome to the world of collegiate baseball!....The majority of the players that you are going to compete with, and against, are just like you are..
Only now they are...
1-3 years more physically, mentally and emotionally more mature than you are.
1-3 years worth of serious supervised weight training bigger than you are.
1-3 years of college ball more experienced than you are.
1-3 years more connected to what the coaching staff wants than you are.
1-3 years worth of collegiate summer ball more experienced than you are.
1-3 years better at balancing academics, baseball and life than you are.
1-3 years mentally tougher than you are.
1-3 years more technically proficient than you are.
1-3 years more aware than you are that time is running out for them.
1-3 years more connected to their teamates than you are
AND you can be assured of some competition that you did not expect...
- guys switch positions to yours,
- players at your position suddenly find themselves
- unexpected JC guys come in at your position,
- high quality players at your position transfer in,
- guys that were projected to vacate your position when you signed?...well sorry kid turns out they are staying...
Beyond that,….I figure that there are moments of truth in EVERY baseball players career...some players start from youth ball having to overcome those moments...others are so talented that they pretty well skirt them...and I tend to think that he further along you see your first REAL moment of truth the more shocking it is....I think because of the age, experience and talent factor, many talented freshman see their first REAL moment of truth when they hit the collegiate field...
It is then that we really begin to separate many players into those who can adapt and grow, not just access physical genetic talent. I think at that point you begin to access a whole new set of characteristics that separate players and they may not even know they possess.
If I were you?...I'd keep those celebrations and projections in context and get started tomorrow working harder than you ever have before...for the next 8 months...and then expect to work harder than that when you get started with the team.
Collegiate baseball is both one of the greatest experiences you will ever have AND one of the most difficult. I suggest you get to work now...today…earning that spot...rather than thinking about it.
I Worked with a girl once who won 3 NCAA national championships. I learned a great deal from her about dedication and work ethic. She was from Alabama. She said that she loved getting up early to work on her game because she knew that she was beating the west coast players with her early start. She said she loved working out late because she knew that she was keeping up with the west coast players.
Her titles were earned not "figured out"..
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