We are recruiting coaches in every state. Please send any amazing leaders of young men to our website at D1DNational.com and they can complete an application to coach. Thank you.
There still one more thing I feel like you left out and that is having a high profile or a lot of exposure as an athlete. By that I mean playing in a well-known and populated area, playing college sports (not just baseball) has turned to a profession itself. Now and days if you're a well-known up and coming baseball player with these tools you're basically going to have schools contacting you every day to come play for them (don't get me stated about the NIL delas). I been to a few college camps myself in North Carolina and I realized that I need to work on these three tools (which I am currently working on over the Christmas break), but I also realized that these kids come from pretty populated areas unlike myself, and those are usually the kids the Coaches know by first name. Where I live baseball is not very popular (at least with minorities) so much to the fact that I never player organized ball till I was 13, and I only have one high school baseball season under my belt (even though I am a Junior and never be injured during the spring & summer seasons). The conversations I've had with these kids they come from places like Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greenville, even out of state. And when someone ask where I from I usually lie and say Greenville because that the closest large city to where I'm from and that is easier that having to explain that I'm not from Plymouth Massachusetts, or where in the world is Plymouth, North Carolina. I could be wrong but then again nobody that went to the same high school as me has received a scholarship to play college baseball in two decades. There is a kid who recently received a scholarship and is currently playing at Barton College, but he was homeschooled unlike the majority of kids in that county (especially kids who are minorities). But that was my two cents or two dollars I should say since this comment is so long, I still have not gave up on playing college baseball as a matter of I just recently joined a travel ball team for the summer, and I'm looking at more than just D-1 schools as well playing college ball at any level would be a blessing! All in all, this was a Great Video!
100% agree. Please set up a FREE Consultation and we can discuss this in detail. calendly.com/coachmarknows/the-ambassadors-group-one-on-one-free-consultation
Oh boy! Not easy via text. It's crazy. Lay on your back. Point your feet in the air straight up. Do tiny "crunches". That's the best I can do. Maybe I get get Ed to do a video and explain and demonstrate. My son did hundreds of thousands of them.
No, in the context of the movie, they were talking about kids they were scouting and going to draft. Billy Bean (Brad Pitt) was bashing the scouts for only looking at the guys for their physiques and not their ability to play the game of baseball well. However, I agree a faster, stronger athlete is generally better than a slower, weaker one. But baseball is such a skill sport, you don’t have to be the biggest, fastest, strongest to have an impact on the game.
Thank you coach, I am working on my speed and core strength. great story
Excellent video!
We are recruiting coaches in every state. Please send any amazing leaders of young men to our website at D1DNational.com and they can complete an application to coach. Thank you.
There still one more thing I feel like you left out and that is having a high profile or a lot of exposure as an athlete. By that I mean playing in a well-known and populated area, playing college sports (not just baseball) has turned to a profession itself. Now and days if you're a well-known up and coming baseball player with these tools you're basically going to have schools contacting you every day to come play for them (don't get me stated about the NIL delas). I been to a few college camps myself in North Carolina and I realized that I need to work on these three tools (which I am currently working on over the Christmas break), but I also realized that these kids come from pretty populated areas unlike myself, and those are usually the kids the Coaches know by first name. Where I live baseball is not very popular (at least with minorities) so much to the fact that I never player organized ball till I was 13, and I only have one high school baseball season under my belt (even though I am a Junior and never be injured during the spring & summer seasons). The conversations I've had with these kids they come from places like Charlotte, Raleigh, Durham, Greenville, even out of state. And when someone ask where I from I usually lie and say Greenville because that the closest large city to where I'm from and that is easier that having to explain that I'm not from Plymouth Massachusetts, or where in the world is Plymouth, North Carolina. I could be wrong but then again nobody that went to the same high school as me has received a scholarship to play college baseball in two decades. There is a kid who recently received a scholarship and is currently playing at Barton College, but he was homeschooled unlike the majority of kids in that county (especially kids who are minorities). But that was my two cents or two dollars I should say since this comment is so long, I still have not gave up on playing college baseball as a matter of I just recently joined a travel ball team for the summer, and I'm looking at more than just D-1 schools as well playing college ball at any level would be a blessing! All in all, this was a Great Video!
100% agree. Please set up a FREE Consultation and we can discuss this in detail. calendly.com/coachmarknows/the-ambassadors-group-one-on-one-free-consultation
I’ve tried searching for wabbas and can’t find anything. Can you describe them?
Oh boy! Not easy via text. It's crazy. Lay on your back. Point your feet in the air straight up. Do tiny "crunches". That's the best I can do. Maybe I get get Ed to do a video and explain and demonstrate. My son did hundreds of thousands of them.
Do you have Ed Lovelace contact info?? Appreciate it.
I guess these guys never watched the movie Moneyball
Those are established major leaguers not high schoolers and college guys
No, in the context of the movie, they were talking about kids they were scouting and going to draft. Billy Bean (Brad Pitt) was bashing the scouts for only looking at the guys for their physiques and not their ability to play the game of baseball well. However, I agree a faster, stronger athlete is generally better than a slower, weaker one. But baseball is such a skill sport, you don’t have to be the biggest, fastest, strongest to have an impact on the game.
That's what I love about baseball.