If you build them up, they will play
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STEVE SMITH
By the time you read this, the Costa Mesa National Little League
Minor A Dodgers team I’ve been coaching will be playing their last
game together. Anyone who looked at our won-lost record would
conclude that our season was a disaster. But the record doesn’t tell
the whole story.
This season, we may have made a baseball player out of Connor
Gilligan, whose appreciation for soccer was made clear to me early in
the season. But Connor turned out to have a very strong and accurate
arm and started many games at pitcher for us. Connor is a bona fide
pitcher, and if he does not play next year, it will be a great loss
to the league.
A couple of players, Matthew Castaneda and Zachary Bates, showed
up looking for coaching and experience and wound up becoming very
strong players. During the last half of the season, I felt very
comfortable with either of them at first base.
Daniel Shammas played as much second base as I could give him, and
in return, he turned three double plays. In two of them, he fielded
grounders, tagged a runner headed for second and threw to first. A
couple of times, I spoke to Daniel about celebrating these and other
accomplishments before the game was over. By the end of the season,
he had matured and was setting an example for the rest of the team.
That example, by the way, was one that former UCLA basketball
coach John Wooden expected from his teams, and it evolves into a way
to stay completely focused on the game. In short, it’s a matter of
behaving so that anyone watching the game without a scoreboard would
not know if you are winning or losing.
Every team should have a player like Riley Schoneman. Not only
does Riley come to play, he brings his exceptional attitude and
constant smile. It’s impossible to have a bad day around him,
something that was particularly important to me this season. Riley’s
dedication was matched by his mother Jamie, our scorekeeper, who
attended more practices and games than anyone else who comes to mind.
Nick Covelli played the first or second toughest position on the
field, depending on whom you ask. As one of our two catchers, and a
new one at that, he was often asked to do more than he had been
coached to do. But he rarely complained, and when he did, he usually
had a good case.
Then there was Andrew Albers, who joined our team a little late
thanks to the defection of one our star players. Andrew is tall and
broad and batted fourth in our line up. That, as you may know, is
called “clean up,” the theory being that this batter comes up to
drive in the batters before him who have made it safely on base.
Andrew played the role very well and proved to have a great throw
from third to first.
Three guys -- Brian Golden, Alex Tenno and Carter Norris -- played
more outfield than they would have liked, I am sure. But along the
way they learned what it means to be part of a team. I know that they
will all contribute to their next team next season.
That’s my hope -- that each of these players returns next year to
play some more baseball. If they do, I’ve done my job properly.
Oh, and there’s one more player to mention. That would be my son,
Roy. Once again, I asked too much of him, and often he was not shy
about letting me know. Having compared notes with enough other
coaches, it seems that that is standard operating procedure for a
coach and his kid. Roy is my kind of baseball player -- always
thinking ahead about the next play or the next two plays.
Last baseball season, Roy and his friend, Ryan Christopher, took a
few pitching lessons from Dan Keller. Dan runs Lifeletics, a coaching
and summer camp program.
Dan was recommended to me by someone whose name I can’t recall,
but I remember the recommendation. “He coaches the whole game,” was
what I was told.
I didn’t know what that meant until the boys started their
lessons, and I started to receive Dan’s e-newsletter. It was then
that I realized that in addition to fundamentals, Dan taught
patience, decency, civility and sportsmanship, with an emphasis on
sportsmanship.
I asked Dan to give me a coaching nugget or two, and here’s what I
got: “Be realistic. Maintain a goal of developing the kids, with an
emphasis on success. Do not get caught up in winning a 10-year-old
league championship at all costs. In the big picture, this is just a
step in the development of an athlete and more importantly a young
person. Be realistic with the ability of your youngsters. This makes
victory more fulfilling and assists with learning how to handle
frustrations.”
Parents and coaches, please read that two or three times.
This is my kind of coach. If that’s your kind of coach, you can
reach Dan at (714) 875-5294 or at [email protected].
Thanks for the memories, Dodgers!
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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