He's been coached at every level, has a great deal to pass on. It's one thing to coach in HS or College, it's another to pass on years of instruction on every aspect of the subject from griping the ball, delivery, stretching and taking care of your body. He's done it all at every level. Those are experiences most HS or College coaches have never experienced unless they have played in minors and MLB. I'm not worried about the rest.
So he is not ONE of the most qualified and decorated volunteer assistants? Wow, just wow.
And for those worried about his coaching experience, remember that this guy has been touched, coached and has spent an innumerable amount of time with the best of coaches in the business. With the success that he has had, one has to assume that to some extent he was a sponge during all of this. That quality is immeasurable and far outweighs any experience that a high school or college coach could possibly have.
When you see high school coaches passing on volunteers that have spent years in the majors or minors all I can say is that it is sickening to think of the experience that these high school coaches are depriving their high school players of. It can be only one thing - the high school coaches know and realize that they will be EXPOSED by keeping them around. What a selfish act.
Baseball is the unique sport where a players approach is the right approach.
Good hitting coaches don't change players swing they might offer slight adjustments it's 90% mental
Same with BJ he will not come in and change the way a guy throws he will be tasked with teaching a players mental approach to the game.
I disagree that coaches don't change deliveries of players. It happens every day in minor league baseball concerning top prospects having to learn how to repeat their delivery, not tipping pitches and becoming more consistent in the strike zone. It's part of development. The mental approach is part of that as well.
Your pitching system may not change, but every pitcher has a different level of development and polish. A pitching coaches job, whether professional or amateur is to help develop and define their role on the team base upon their abilities.
There are some great books on pitching, Tom House is a name in MLB that get's thrown around quit a bit. "The Pitching Edge" and "Nolan Ryan's Pitcher's Bible" are two books that he was involved in writing.
There may be a question on whether BJ Ryan can manage different personalities, but that will start with Coach Deggs setting the tone in the program. BJ Ryan brings a tremendous amount of knowledge and respect to the position and I've already seen the excitement on the social media from some of the young men he will coach. I just don't see his lack of a coaching resume as a big problem as others.
Second guessing Deggs at this point is not wise, imo.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)