PGStaff posted:Very difficult... Not impossible!
My point is the coach that finishes in the middle or even lower in his conference could easily be the best coach in the conference.
Winning is just one of the definitions of a good coach. IMO
When your top pitcher throws in the 70s and they have four guys that throw 85 or better, it makes winning more difficult. Especially if they are also more talented at the other positions. More difficult... Not impossible.
fair points, I think we are pretty close.
In my time playing, watching and now parenting a player at the Varsity level what I see is - the coaches that install discipline play regardless of sport are winners - in baseball it may be the below in some form
- players know and understand the basics - pitch ahead in counts, play tight D, cover bases, understand productive AB's from average kids, pitch selection and approach - the mental side of the game alone will win you a handful of games each year.
- are committed to the process of getting better all players better from day 1 as freshman to last day of SR year (productive efficient practice time, off season strength and agility training, support to booster club, support out of school development process etc)
- don't allow kids with the wrong attitude to be a part of the program, that may mean attempting fix a talented but bad attitude before removing however either is preferred to leaving it in place
- works with local community programs as well with local travel teams in talent development and college support - the more kids in his school playing lots of games the more talent he will have to work with.
Those 4 things alone will make most any program a competent, difficult opponent year in and year out regardless of having the top talent.