Go 
|
New 
|
Find 
|
Notify 
|
|
Reply 
|
|
Admin 
|
New PM! 
|
Member

|
My freshman college son is a good example for kids learning more than 1 position. In high school he was a well regarded catcher here in San Diego. At his DI college what has gotten him the starting lineup is his ability to play more than one position. So far this season, he has started in left field, center field, right field and 3rd base. No time yet at the position he was recruited at, catcher. Luckily for him he played many positions growing up so he could learn more about the game. It's helped immensely in his first year of college baseball. He hasn't missed catching at all to this point I guess because he's happy to be in the starting lineup at any position. Advice: try to learn and master more than 1 position as you go, it will give a coach at the next level several options to get your bat in the lineup that maybe other players on the team don't give him.
Frank Coit Dad, Coach, Baseball Fan-atic
|
| |
| Posts: 370 | Location: San Diego, Ca. | Registered: December 31, 2002 |    |
|
Member

|
I agree with matadordad. My oldest son(an '02 HS grad)only played first base beginning with summer little league. He was so good at catching the ball and at that level catching the ball at first was very important. He was also a power hitter. When he transferred to another school his junior year the first base position was filled. He had to quickly learn to be a utility player(right field, left field, third base, catcher and pitcher). This past year his high school coach said he wished he had made him his varsity catcher when he came to the school. Hindsight is 20/20. My youngest son(an 8th grader) is the catcher for his jr. high team, but is also the #2 pitcher. He also fills in at 3rd base and at shortstop.
"Every member of our baseball team at West Point became a general; this proves the value of team sports." --General Omar Bradley
|
| |
| Posts: 92 | Location: Oklahoma | Registered: February 28, 2003 |    |
|
 | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
Copyright 1998-2008 High School Baseball Web
|