Travel Day

Being a baseball coach can have its challenges. One of them is leaving the comforts of home for the city of your current team.. I have lived in a lot of cities for baseball season. Let me list them, Sarasota, Tampa, Billings, Plant City, Greensboro, Cedar Rapids, St. Petersburg, South Charleston, Chattanooga, Hagerstown, Louisville, Cincinnati, Scottsdale, Goodyear, and now Greeneville, Tn. The drive this time was five hours and thanks to my guardian angel, uneventful. We arrived and reported to Tusculum University which would be home for the next 12 weeks.

I am the pitching coach for the newly formed Greenville Flyboys in the Appalachain League. The gear is legit and don’t forget I was in the major leagues for eight seasons. The first day is complete once you fill out paper work and of course, move in. The people here have set up housing for me , a four bedroom apartment, on campus. Yes, on campus housing for the first time since 1986, that is 35 years ago for those of you without calculators.

This place is mostly furnished, many I have had in the past, have not been. I also do not have to turn on the cable, because there is none. I didn’t have to put the power in my name or water, anything for that matter. I did bring in a suitcase full of clothes and shoes. The mandatory baseball bag and gear, duh. I also brought two boxes of food and cleaning supplies so I can make the transition easier. Having ready to eat food is healthy and money and time saving.

After one night there were some additions that were necessary to make the dorm apartment more ” home sweet home” like. It took me 24 hours to realize there wasn’t a stove!! No complaints, cause there aint no crying in baseball. I headed to the store and got creative! I found a George Foreman indoor grill and an Egg Bite Maker. Whaattt??? The Egg Bite Maker is a small appliance you plug in and make small egg “muffins”. Ill report back on whether it works well! I threw in an old school Mr. Coffee coffee maker and finished the shopping journey with purchases of a mattress pad, (the mattress is not a real mattress it’s more like a box) some area rugs, blankets, candles, Clorox and a mop! Now that the apartment was ready it was time to get some sleep and get ready for the first practive with The Flyboys!! Lets Go!

Gains are not linear.

On day one of my throwing velocity class there are two dozen young athletes, all with the desire to throw harder. This professor of velocity briefly outlines the class. Weeks 1-6 we will assess your ability to move, we will measure one’s strength, learn and execute the exercises, drill work will be performed with the sole goal in mind- which is- to promote arm care while learning to throw the ball hard. As the class enters the final week of our ramping up period we begin to discus the velocity enhancement portion of the course. One point we must emphasize, velocity gains are not linear. When heard, the average athlete thinks” that does not apply to me”, but for the majority of athletes and people. this will become true. It is the frustrating part of training. The lack of weekly gains can cause one to question the methodology of the program design, it makes one wonder” what am I doing wrong”. Driveline baseball, a pioneer in baseball research and player development, displays a graph where athletes hits a lull and underlines this part sucks. Many other strength and conditioning blogs have written about strength gains not being linear. Many times a climb in strength will often be followed by a dip in power before we climb to a higher threshold, Reaching a PR
( personal record) in velocity is an amazing, rewarding, exhilarating feeling. A reward for all my hard work. It makes me fired up to see the athlete hit another PR.

Sports often mimics life and as we know, success is not always linear as well. We climb the corporate ladder each year and all of a sudden, we are passed up for one promotion, just one, and self doubt begins to creep in our thoughts. Professional baseball players usually start their careers in Rookie level baseball. Man, the next year I am moving on up the Low A baseball. The next season comes, a promotion to High A. The over confident thoughts of, I have this figured out is at the forefront of my mind, I will be major leaguer in two or three years. But, the harsh truth is, next year I find myself repeating the same level of competition. What is happening, we ask ourselves. Why are they doing this to me? I was on schedule to make my Major League debut in two more years. Will people look differently at me since an not climbing up as fast?. I possibly wish I would have been more humble and not talked so openly how I was on the fast track to stardom. We all face road blocks, detours, temporary plateaus in our personal development, our professional life and even in our pursuit of elite velocity. How we react it what separates people/ athletes in their relentless pursuit of excellence.

A bump in the road is not a crossroad, let’s not a mountain out of a molehill my momma says. She is right. However, spending too much time standing in place is an issue if you are truly chasing excellence in your life or in your athletic goals. Many times, we look outward to find fault in one’s lack of personal gains. Richard Bach, an American writer widely known of some of the 70’s biggest sellers, wrote ” The worst lies are the ones we tell ourselves”. Those lies are dangerous. In this classroom, the teacher- that’s me- is selling the point that we are going to look inward when things are not going our way. This arm care and velocity program is based on principles. We are going to ask ourselves if we are meeting the given criteria are we controlling the controllables? Difference making areas we need to examine; proper sleep, calorie intake, hydration. We are going to check these boxes first. Let’s examine our foundational principles. Question one, how am moving? We are going to walk through the FMS movement screen, re test our strength and check our technique through slow motion video. Self examination, one might state. One that doesn’t weigh heavy on opinions but on facts. One particular frustrated participant found himself to have poor range of motion and needed to follow up with corrective exercises. His upper body strength had lessened with his performance. He honestly stated how terrible he had been with proper hydration because it simply has not been a priority. I give this young man props, he looked inward. A plan was out in place. Best pitching advice I was ever given, ” plan your work, work your plan”. Thanks to Larry Rothschild, long time major league coach, for that gem. A player development plan, one could replace the word player with personal or career, we have to have plan of attack. Now, that we are focused on the process, the gains are climbing once again.

gains have not been linear. A personal development plan is in place for this eager student!!