NTX HS summer baseball has begun. 10 things a HS pitcher should be working on. Nothing magical or unique about this list.
1. Set Warm Up routine
2. Set Mental prep routine
3. Set Recovery routine
4. Set in-week bullpen schedule
5. Set pre-game routine
6. Set in-week strength & mobility routine
7. Daily tracking update
8. Food & Water & Sleep
9. Self-video review
10. Curiosity
Set - means You set it, and change it as you figure out what works best for you.
I can say this now b/c no one can blackball my kid, but North Texas High School travel ball pitching INSTRUCTION is gǒu shi. Maybe its was only really bad in the 4 years I spent watching it. And i watched a lot. I’ve got handful of young pitchers I keep in touch with, that confirm it has not gotten any better. Here’s a few hints that your son’s travel ball pitching instruction is mierda de perro. (1) If your travel ball coach is not taking at least one video per game of the pitchers and giving it to them with comment— its crotte de chien. (2) If your travel ball coach lets your son throw 30 pitches in an inning — it’s hundescheiße. (3) If all of your pitchers have the same bullpen day, but routinely start on different days — it’s merda di cane. (4) If your travel ball coach is not actively warming up relief pitchers with 5 minutes notice — it’s собачье дерьмо. (5) If your travel ball coach does not enforce warm up and recovery protocols for the pitchers — it’s 犬のクソ. (6) If you bring any of this up, and get either a puzzled look, or push back because it’s not necessary — Definitely hondenstront. Think I’m being hyperbolic? Ask your pitcher what kind of instruction they are getting? If your kid is not getting better right now, every game, all you are doing is engraining psie gówno movement patterns, when he could be in a gym, spending that travel ball money with a legit personal trainer or pitching coach that will make them better. To those NTX travel ball teams doing the above, I’m really sorry I missed getting to see you play. THBMBT. @CoachBeede@Velo_doc
Pull up the current rosters of the three schools your athlete talks about most. Count how many athletes play their position and what grad years they are. If they brought in two at that spot last cycle, that tells you more about your real odds than any camp invite will.
Just in case you missed it!
The most priceless, special gift I have ever received.
This is a masterpiece and will serve as motivation to get me through my toughest days. Forever grateful for the @Royals and @kcroyalstv!
#SarahsSoldiers#FightLikeAGirl#StrongerTogether
The Scouting Classroom #20
THE HARDEST POSITION TO FIND AND DEVELOP
For me, the hardest position for a scout to find and develop is catcher.
Not because there aren’t players willing to put the gear on. There are plenty. The challenge is finding a true catcher.
There is a big difference between someone who catches and someone who can run a game, handle a staff, control tempo, receive velocity, block with toughness, throw accurately, and still compete in the batter’s box.
That is what makes the position different
A catcher has to do a little bit of everything, and most of it does not show up in the box score. Fans may notice pop time or arm strength. Scouts are watching the quieter details.
• Does he receive the ball cleanly? • Does he steal strikes without making it obvious? • Does he block with conviction? • Does he recover quickly? • Does he throw with carry and accuracy? • Does the pitcher trust him? • Does he control tempo? • Does he lead without needing attention? • Does he handle failure without carrying it into the next pitch?
That is why catching is so difficult to evaluate. You are not just grading tools. You are grading responsibility.
THE BAT MAKES IT EVEN HARDER
The toughest part is finding a catcher who can defend and still hit.
Many young catchers fall behind offensively because the position demands so much. Their legs get tired, their hands take a beating, and their minds get overloaded. They spend so much time learning to receive, block, throw, call pitches, and manage pitchers that the bat often develops more slowly.
That does not mean the hitter is not in there.
It means scouts have to be patient.
Some catchers need more time, more innings, or better competition. Some need to fail, adjust, mature, and learn to slow the game down. A young catcher may have the arm before the receiving, the bat before the trust, or the toughness before the feel.
That is development
WHY REAL CATCHERS ARE RARE
A real catcher has to earn trust from everyone around him.
Pitchers have to believe in him. Coaches have to trust him. Scouts have to project him. Organizations have to stay patient.
You can move a good athlete to the outfield. You can shift a shortstop to another position. You can dream on a pitcher with arm strength. Catching is different. You cannot fake the innings, the feel, or the leadership when the game speeds up.
The position exposes you
• It exposes your toughness. • It exposes your instincts. •It exposes your aptitude. • It exposes your patience. • It exposes your ability to think while your body is getting beat up.
That is why scouts pay close attention when they see a young catcher who can truly handle the position.
THE SCOUTING LESSON
When a scout finds a catcher with defensive trust, arm strength, toughness, leadership, feel for the game, and offensive upside, he does not just write it down and move on.
He follows him
Because those players are hard to find
And even harder to develop
The position is not just about tools. It is about carrying responsibility pitch after pitch, inning after inning, game after game.
That is why catcher, for me, is the hardest position to find and develop.
That’s scouting!
#BehindTheRadarGun
Day 31
How can we support you?
The truth is, you already are.
By reading these daily posts, sharing them, commenting, and helping spread awareness, you have been supporting me every step/roll of the way. Over the past month, my Facebook profile alone has reached more than 4 million views. That’s 4 million opportunities for someone to learn about ALS, and that means more to me than I can adequately express.
On Lou Gehrig Day at The K, I was overwhelmed with emotion as I looked around the stadium and saw Sarah’s Soldiers shirts scattered throughout the crowd. Seeing so many people stand beside me in this fight was a powerful reminder that I am not facing ALS alone. I feel incredibly blessed to call Kansas City home and to be surrounded by such a compassionate and supportive community.
For those who have asked how they can continue to help, if you would like to purchase a shirt or donate directly to support my personal fight with ALS, you can do so here:
https://t.co/yZhFjgug5p
If you would like to purchase a Royals-themed Sarah’s Soldiers shirt or support the nonprofit I created to help others battling ALS, you can do so here:
https://t.co/UVRscGWvH0
Both sites also allow donations without a purchase.
As this month comes to a close, I want to say thank you. Thank you for reading, sharing, encouraging, and learning alongside me. I have read every comment, every message, and every word of support. While ALS has taken many things from me, it has also shown me the incredible kindness, generosity, and strength that exists in others.
My hope is that these 31 days have helped you better understand ALS and the realities of living with it. Awareness creates understanding, understanding creates action, and action is what will ultimately lead us to a cure.
From the bottom of my heart, thank you for being part of this journey and for standing with me in the fight against ALS. 💙
📸credit: The One and Only @JasonHannaphoto
#ALS #ALSAwareness #FightLikeAGirl #SarahsSoldiers #Thankful #Blessed
This is why I teach what I teach
Velo isn’t everything
It gets you in the door but doesn’t guarantee success unless you are facing guys who can’t hit at the D1 level
Being able to drop a changeup for a strike in any count will get you better results that a flat 95
If you are 7-8mph (84 with sink) below the “hitting speed” you’ll get more outs than the guy throwing 92 when guys are geared up for it
Slow lefties kill fastball hunting lineups
All this plays in
What kills me is when a recruiting coordinator won’t even look at a 89-91 guy because the metrics aren’t there, then they get torched by inconsistent outings from the flame throwing guys
Could go on and on about this
The guys who are 95+ for strikes used to be minor leaguers at this stage of their life - the rule changes are the reason these few guys are in college (still rare) nowadays
Need a strikeout? Nasty stuff and high velo sure thing
Need a quality start? Need a guy who can hit the broad side of a barn when he wants to
2026 Regional Avg FB Velo across all 64 Regional teams is 90.8 MPH.
🔥 Highest: Wake Forest — 94.4 MPH
📉 Lowest: Alabama State — 84.7 MPH
A few takeaways:
• 90+ MPH is no longer elite at the college level — it's becoming the standard.
• Nearly every Regional features multiple staffs averaging 91-93+.
• Velocity isn't everything... but it's becoming increasingly difficult to survive without it.
If you want to play at a competitive D1 program… 90MPH is the benchmark.
Velo gets your foot in the door… secondary pitches and command get you innings‼️
Ethan Norby. 5-10, 195 lbs LHP for the ECU Pirates. Comes in with a 2-0 count, 1 out, tied 1-1, bottom of the 7th, go ahead run on 3rd. Strikes out the next two!
How can you not be a romantic about baseball.