Love it and how at the end he basically said what all bad coaches teach today to “create launch angle” and immediately drop the barrel head and chicken wing it. In his own words, “You’re out.”
This is what I have been working with my son as his little league coaches don't emphasize the importance of balance and allowing kids to swing with hands... don't care whether my son gets a hit or not, as long as he gets the balance stand and swing the knot as hits will eventually come...
The Yankees team from the mid 1990s to the early 2000s was the greatest team in recent memory. The 1998 Yankees won 114 games. SF Giants and Boston Red Sox teams in the 2000s, the A's team in the early 1970s were also impressive. The Big Red Machine was a powerhouse but a little short on pitching vs the aforementioned teams..... inho....
When I began following baseball as a fan, it was 1967. One of the biggest regrets was not having seen Sandy Koufax pitch. I had all the Topps baseball cards and in the pitching league leaders Sandy was in front of every card with that iconic blue dodger cap. I thought, how could God be so cruel.
Sandy was the best I ever saw and I from Philly. Steve Carlton went 27 and 10 for the Phils, the worst team in the Major Leagues, in 1972. Sandy had six of those type seasons
Dude was 17 here and already slotted to be the 1 pick. To put that into perspective everyone else on that field was just hoping to get picked up by a D1 school or drafted at all, and they were 19-22. Him being there put alot of the guys in the dugout into opportunities to be seen they would never have had.
Went to Tony Gwynn's clinic in 1990. It was GREAT learned a lot and met some nice mlb players and coaches . Tony was one of the nicest most humble you could ever meet
take it easy, folks. a little bit of "feedback" from a coach, or even the bench in general, is nothing to get excited about. if i ejected, or even warned, every player or coach who said "come on, blue", i'd rarely finish a game. vocabulary and/or tone are the important factors. until then, directed vision and constructive deafness are great tools on your belt. if you really want to throw somebody off, look at the bench and smile. that'll keep 'em guessing... bottom line: if you can't take a little pg-rated constructive criticism, don't umpire. the only person you have to answer to is yourself.
He got ran for running his mouth after he had been warned. He knew exactly what he was doing when he said who after he was told to stop complaining about balls and strikes. By the way - it is against the rules to argue balls and strikes and the penalty is ejection. He was warned when the umpire said that is enough... that is a warning and then he got ran because he continued running his mouth. This is pathetic behavior any one who is gutless enough to talk in circles to try to keep arguing and get out of facing the penalty is a pathetic excuse for a a human being.
@@kerrytodd3753 whether the pitch is a ball or a strike rats don't have the right run their dick licker ESPECIALLY high school players. when they do they get run. the penalty for arguing balls & strikes is ejection. players, coaches, or managers have zero right to argue balls and strikes or to expect umpires to listen to them argue if they miss a pitch.
@@kerrytodd3753 Not to mention... there is no way in hell you can tell if it is a ball or strike from this video. You can't even see the plate on the pitch in question. the catcher is clearly set up inside and shifts out to catch the ball and that is all you can see. you can't see if the catcher sticks it or whether it is on or off the plate. have some integrity their moron.
@@garygemmell3488 In my words F*ck Off Francis. If you think this is ok then you are part of the problem. The fact that this is game played by high school kids is all the more reason it is pathetic behavior and it sounds like you condone it. This is a horrible way to set an example and this is a really good example of a horrible role model. Life isn't fair and you can't throw temper tantrums when things don't go your way and that is example what this coach is teaching there Francis.