Players Corner

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Regina Optimist Baseball Association
 

Words of Wisdom

  • Persistence is more important than talent.
  • There is a reason that the word STUDENT comes fist in student/athlete.
  • Respect the game as much as you want to be respected.
  • Tuck in Your Shirt.
  • Don't wear your hat backwards.
  • Practice hard because you play the way you practice.
  • It doesn't take talent to Hustle.
  • Be a student of baseball.
  • Learn the Game.
  • Study the history of baseball.
  • Help your team win whether you play or not.
  • Never argue with an umpire.
  • Agree to let your coaches teach you.
  • Your parents love you, but they don't know more than your coach about baseball (with one exception!).
  • Maintain eye contact with all adults when they talk to you.
  • Practice on your friends.
  • Be passionate about your teammates.
  • Life is not fair, regardless of what some people want you to think.
  • Love the Game.
  • Body Language Screams, it never whispers.
  • Be as diligent on defense as your are on offense.
  • Balance makes champions.
  • If you focus on hitting and ignore the defensive part of the game, you will never be a complete player.
  • Defense wins more games than offense.
  • Pitching sets the tone.
  •  Show off your talent to your current coach and your future coach by doing the following (ALLthe Time);
  • When you jog to warm up, finish first.
  • When you stretch, do it best
  • When you play catch, throw to a target and hit it as much as you can.
  • When you are doing a drill, do it perfect every time.
  • Go hard all the time. Never walk on a baseball field.
  • As a batter/runner, run to first as though it matters that you are safe.
  • Know the situation on defense and do the right thing
  • BASEBALL REVEALS CHARACTER, IT DOESN'T BUILD IT. - Character means doing the right  thing evenwhen nobody's watching.

        "The Winning Pitch, Collegiate Baseball, Thomas Alston, October 8,1999." (source)

 

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Sportsmanship 

Sportsmanship isn't just about shaking hands after the game.

It's about helping young athletes enjoy the spirit of competition, deal with adversity, and handle authority figures properly. (Skills that are good for any kid to learn.)

Here are five tips to boost sportsmanship in young players—and help them prepare for life in the process.

Sportsmanship Tip No.1:  Find a Role Model

Character is a word that gets used often, but its true meaning may be hard to explain to a young mind. It's ultimately a choice to hold oneself to a higher standard. By raising standards early, an athlete can both give and expect mutual respect during their course of competition.

Find a pro athlete the child idolizes, and is a good character athlete, and have them "visualize" themselves acting as that athlete would.

Sportsmanship Tip No.2: Give 110 Percent

One way to instill the idea of sportsmanship is to let the athlete know that they should do their personal best and to treat teammates and opponents in the same fashion they wish to be treated. This age-old idea will help them become an  admirable and respected competitor, and help them off the field as well.

Sportsmanship Tip No.3: Forget the Numbers

It's important to the young athlete to understand that for as many victories as they hope to have, they must face losing if they're going to play their sport.

An effective method is to have a young  athlete  pick out well-known popular athletes, particularly in their sport or sports of interest, and look up their statistics. Knowing that professional athletes have faced defeat can teach the young competitor to deal with loss rationally and graciously.

Sportsmanship Tip No.4: What (Not) to Do

Dealing with adversity and authority figures in sports  is another challenge that young athletes must face. This is another instance where the proper explanation of how situations should and should not be dealt with, as well as examples from professional sports, should be used.

One can easily find examples of the proper and improper handling of referees, umpires and judges to provide visual examples to back up instruction. (Baseball is especially good at showing how players should deal with inconsistent officiating.)

Sportsmanship Tip No.5: Have Fun

Sometimes young athletes need to be constantly reminded that sports are designed to be fun. Practice and skill building should be offset by times of goofing off, perhaps practicing with crazy costumes or with fun music, and not critiquing or coaching in the traditional sense.

This one little thing can do wonders in reminding the athlete not to take anything too serious and to have fun doing what they have chosen to participate in.

source:http://www.active.com/active-family/articles/5-Ways-to-Build-Sportsmanship-in-Young-Athletes

 

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Baseball "Instruction" > http://www.qcbaseball.com/skills/baseball_instruction1.aspx