Inside The Dugout with The Pack
What if the most powerful coaching lessons you could learn didn’t come from the big leagues, but from someone who built baseball programs from scratch across Eastern Europe? In this episode, a veteran coach shares how he went from college ball in California to decades of coaching in Slovakia, Austria, Ukraine, and Poland. He blends child psychology, biomechanics, and on-field experience to challenge the way most coaches think about development. You’ll hear why understanding each player as a person matters more than copying what the pros do on TV. Are you ready to rethink what successful coaching really looks like? Timestamps 00:00 – Host introduction and guest setup 01:05 – College playing career and walking away from the game 03:10 – Studying child psychology and returning to baseball 05:26 – Building a successful community college program 07:08 – Coaching across ages and levels in European baseball 09:18 – Closed-minded coaching and the problem with most clinics 11:09 – Learning from players and evolving pitching philosophy 13:57 – Discovering new throwing mechanics and “whipping” the ball 17:16 – Why knowing the “why” builds belief in athletes 21:06 – Physics, biomechanics, and realistic swing expectations 23:04 – The coach as servant and constant learner 26:20 – Respecting players, teaching vs. just training 29:39 – Handling emotions, abuse, and still getting results 30:26 – Parenting parallels and “because I said so” coaching 32:30 – Critique of pay-to-train culture and false promises 35:52 – You are not a pro: setting honest goals for young players 36:44 – One core message for new coaches: understand your players 38:37 – Joy, longevity, and staying young through coaching Quotes * You are the servant of the player; their day in the sun is now, not yours. * Many coaches teach what they were taught but have no idea why it actually works. * Stop promising kids they will hit like a pro and start helping them become the best version of themselves. * If you build a player’s self-confidence, self-image, and honesty in the mirror, you have done your job as a coach. * The energy of young players keeps you alive and young, no matter how old or banged up your body feels. Key Takeaways * Effective coaching starts with truly understanding each player’s dreams, limits, and potential. * Great coaches keep learning—about psychology, physics, and mechanics—rather than relying on old habits. * Using objective results and clear demonstrations is the best way to change techniques and win buy-in. * Respectful, player-focused coaching that develops character and confidence matters more than win–loss records. * The pay-to-train, “be like a pro” model often misleads families, so honest, realistic development should be the priority.
26 episodios
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