quote:
Originally posted by Playball2:
but to place all HS coaches in the lousy box is unacceptable and unfair.
I never said that, that is your characterization of my statement and is inaccurate.
I did say that most are lousy talent evaluators and I believe that to be true, and not limited to just baseball. That means they lack a specific skill, but doesn't paint their total effort as being lousy coaches. I had no intention of making that inference as it is not true. I should have used a better term than, "lousy", as that has a negative connotation to it that I didn't intend, and probably would have been better served by better word choice...for that I apologize.
A pitcher with a lousy change up is not a bad pitcher, he only lacks a single skill and can still be a great pitcher by excelling at other skills.
quote:
Originally posted by Playball2:
Even the laziest of coaches will look for those skills that will help them be successful and give them the best chance to win, so they won't have to work that hard.
But, if they have never worked on their evaluation and identification skills, or simply lack the ability, then they can look all they want, and still are incapable of the right decisions. Let's not confuse activity with achievement.
Talent evaluation can be worked on, but my opinion is that much of it is an intangible asset, you either see it or you don't. It's much like an umpire. I've seen umpires that for 10 years have never been able to see a curveball come from outside the zone, hit the edge, and call it for a strike. He just doesn't see it, and showing it to him 10,000 times won't make him see it any better. Talent evaluation is much like that. If you have an eye for it, someone can show you the nuances of what to look for, what it means, and how it translates into specific abilities/skills. You need to learn what to look for, but if you have "it", meaning an eye for talent evaluation, then you can identify specific skills in athletes. There is a great deal of natural ability involved, just as there is with other facets of sport. There is no shame in not possessing it, only in not working on developing it.
Jerry Wainwright, Depaul basketball coach, jokes that when he was an assistant at Wake Forest, he was the guy that recommended they not offer a scholarship to David Robinson.