Our season has been done for two weeks now. What is it that college baseball coaches do when their seasons end? What I do now is different than when I was a full-time head coach, and it is different that what full-time assistant coaches do.
I teach in the public schools, so I am still working at getting through the school year. Today we even had an injury at school. One of our students lost a tooth when he was hit in the mouth by a swing. I felt so bad for him, but he handled it like a trooper and was on the bus heading home fifteen minutes later. I have seen similar types of injuries on the baseball field over the years, but I seem to expect to see blood on the field more than I would at school.
Anyway, the day after our season ended I went to Comerica Park to watch the Detroit Catholic League Championship games with Eric Theisen and Xander Younce. They both have 'Recruiting Coordinator' listed as part of their jobs, so they were (apparently) working hard. I was just along for the ride, but I always love those games. I played at Tiger Stadium in the same games when I was in high school and coached there (and won) in 1987.
I have been to a few other local high school games in the last two weeks, sometimes after school and also on the weekends. I don't really do any recruiting, but I have been able to see some kids I know play some games. I have given lessons to some of the kids in the county, and some pitching staffs in the county, and I rarely have opportunities to see them play in games.
The full-time guys are going all over the place watching high school games. For the most part, the 2011 recruiting classes are all wrapped up and the coaches are trying to tie up some loose ends and maybe find a player or two who have slipped through the cracks. This is a great time to add to the list of 2012 high school seniors that college coaching staffs have already been working on. State tournament games always tend to have some more excitement and intensity than some other games that are played during the high school season, so the idea of being able to see kids compete and observe how they respond to various situations can be beneficial in determining where a player may go on a coach's recruiting list. Eric and Xander are in Columbus, Ohio today and tomorrow watching the Ohio State Tournament, and then they will be back here in Michigan watching District Tournaments on Saturday.
In the meantime, Luke Harrigan is finishing up his work at Adrian College and getting ready for his first head coaching venture at Westminster College in Missouri, where he will undoubtedly find success carve some history.
One thing I always enjoy while at high school games is the opportunity to trade idle chit chat with some of the locals, who are usually parents, grandparents, or friends of the players on the field. These people always know more about most of the players on the field than I do, and of course they always have more at stake in how the game is being played than I do. Just in the last week I have had the privilege of talking to school administrators, aunts and uncles, siblings, parents, step-parents, and friends of the players and the coaches.
The experience of having nice, relaxing conversations at baseball fields with other baseball people is one of the great joys of the spring and summer. I have to make sure I get out and see some other local kids, and my nephews, play in the next few weeks. I may not appear to be having as much fun as the kids on the field..............but I am!!!!
I teach in the public schools, so I am still working at getting through the school year. Today we even had an injury at school. One of our students lost a tooth when he was hit in the mouth by a swing. I felt so bad for him, but he handled it like a trooper and was on the bus heading home fifteen minutes later. I have seen similar types of injuries on the baseball field over the years, but I seem to expect to see blood on the field more than I would at school.
Anyway, the day after our season ended I went to Comerica Park to watch the Detroit Catholic League Championship games with Eric Theisen and Xander Younce. They both have 'Recruiting Coordinator' listed as part of their jobs, so they were (apparently) working hard. I was just along for the ride, but I always love those games. I played at Tiger Stadium in the same games when I was in high school and coached there (and won) in 1987.
I have been to a few other local high school games in the last two weeks, sometimes after school and also on the weekends. I don't really do any recruiting, but I have been able to see some kids I know play some games. I have given lessons to some of the kids in the county, and some pitching staffs in the county, and I rarely have opportunities to see them play in games.
The full-time guys are going all over the place watching high school games. For the most part, the 2011 recruiting classes are all wrapped up and the coaches are trying to tie up some loose ends and maybe find a player or two who have slipped through the cracks. This is a great time to add to the list of 2012 high school seniors that college coaching staffs have already been working on. State tournament games always tend to have some more excitement and intensity than some other games that are played during the high school season, so the idea of being able to see kids compete and observe how they respond to various situations can be beneficial in determining where a player may go on a coach's recruiting list. Eric and Xander are in Columbus, Ohio today and tomorrow watching the Ohio State Tournament, and then they will be back here in Michigan watching District Tournaments on Saturday.
In the meantime, Luke Harrigan is finishing up his work at Adrian College and getting ready for his first head coaching venture at Westminster College in Missouri, where he will undoubtedly find success carve some history.
One thing I always enjoy while at high school games is the opportunity to trade idle chit chat with some of the locals, who are usually parents, grandparents, or friends of the players on the field. These people always know more about most of the players on the field than I do, and of course they always have more at stake in how the game is being played than I do. Just in the last week I have had the privilege of talking to school administrators, aunts and uncles, siblings, parents, step-parents, and friends of the players and the coaches.
The experience of having nice, relaxing conversations at baseball fields with other baseball people is one of the great joys of the spring and summer. I have to make sure I get out and see some other local kids, and my nephews, play in the next few weeks. I may not appear to be having as much fun as the kids on the field..............but I am!!!!
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