Article

Baseball Instruction - Is it Just Your Imagination?

Topic: SportsPublished November 15, 2008

Legacy signals

Legacy popularity: 758 legacy views

Have you even been up to bat or on the mound and wanted to hide? Just maybe crawl under the plate, or peel back the pitching rubber and slip underneath for a bit and let someone else deal with the situation?nnI'm laughing while I'm writing this because I can't tell you how many times those thoughts had occurred to me while playing through college and professionally. But, for every one of those quick moments of despair, confusion, uncertainty, or dread, I've had dozens of high quality confident thoughts. And that is the key. The ratio of high quality to low quality thoughts needs to be significantly greater.nnSo, if you are working with an athlete (or 13 of them) who struggles with confidence on the field, take some of these words to heart and reach out and include these ideas in your baseball instruction.nnAn athlete can only have two different kinds of thoughts while playing the game, high quality and low quality. Here are the definitions of each.nnHigh quality thoughts: These are positive forward thinking thoughts that are meant to build the confidence of the athlete. High quality thoughts remain in the present tense (while in a performance) and help an athlete rise to a challenge. For example, "I will hit (present tense) this pitcher for a double in the gap", or "There is no chance this batter hits me now (present tense)".nnLow quality thoughts: These thoughts are negative in nature and do nothing to help an athlete succeed. The more the player is struggling, the more prevalent low quality thoughts are. Low quality thinking lives in the past or the future tense. They are disease ridden and can affect a performance tremendously. Examples include, "I hope I don't strike out (future tense)", or "I really can't believe I walked that guy (past tense)."nnNow that you have an awareness of the two types of thinking in an athletes' mind, the question is how to add it into your baseball instruction.nnTry these couple suggestions during practice (or games).nn1. Prevent your athletes (or your son if you're a parent) from speaking anything negative about his game. Negative talk can be directed towards oneself, others, the game, the length of practice, conditioning, or a myriad of any other situations or things. Preventing this type of low quality conversation will reduce the amount of time the mind will choose to access negativity in uncomfortable situations.nn2. Use focus points. I've written more in depth on this in other pieces, but the short of it is when the mind is fully focused on any given thing, there is no ability for any other thought to pass through the mind. Therefore, train hitters or pitchers to focus their attention onto a part of the plate or a piece of the glove (for pitchers) just before they retrain the focus back to the pitcher, or hitter. This brief moment of 100% focus will dismiss any poor thinking occurring within the athlete. Focus will then be retrained back on the task at hand without low quality thinking.nnA final recommendation for you is don't give up on this technique if it's strange or uncomfortable at first, it takes practice. Combining a deep breath during the focus point will also have a calming effect.nnGood luck, keep reading on this subject, and you'll be able to help grow mental giants that will dominate this lesser taught part of the game.

Further reading

Further Reading

4 total

Article

Sports play a powerful role in personal growth. Beyond physical fitness, they develop discipline, consistency, and the ability to make thoughtful decisions under pressure. Athletes—professional or amateur—rely heavily on structured planning and data awareness to improve performance and stay focused on long-term goals. This article explains how sports encourage responsible planning , data-driven thinking , and self-control , all of which are essential life skills. Discipli

January 15, 2026

Article

Sports have entered a new era. It is no longer just about physical strength or raw talent — it is about strategy, analytics, and precision. Teams and athletes that use data intelligently are redefining what it means to win. Smarter Strategies in Modern Football Football clubs today operate like data-driven ecosystems. Every pass, sprint, and recovery is tracked, analyzed, and optimized. Coaches use predictive tools to plan substitutions, manage workloads, and design flexibl

October 31, 2025

Article

rnSports are more than just competition—they’re a reflection of life itself. Whether you’re chasing a ball, crossing a finish line, or setting a personal record, sports teach us lessons that go far beyond the field. Every athlete knows that success doesn’t come overnight; it’s built through persistence, patience, and purpose. How Sports Shape Our Mindset When you train for any sport, your body becomes stronger—but your mind becomes unshakable. You learn to embrace

October 18, 2025

Article

Image source: Unsplash Understanding how the body responds and adapts to physical activity is crucial for optimizing athletic performance. Sports physiology provides a foundation for this knowledge, helping athletes and coaches make informed decisions about training and recovery. As the body undergoes stress from exercise, it experiences immediate and long-term changes, from increased heart rate to improved muscular strength and endurance. According to Quentin Geczy , monitor

July 31, 2025