Welcome to the Complete Game podcast, where we're all about baseball with Ethan Dungan, owner of Glovehound Baseball glove repair shop.
Speaker ARick Finley, founder of MDNI Baseball Academy and the creator of George Foster Baseball, the MVP himself, Reds hall of Famer George Foster.
Speaker AI'm your host, Greg Dungan.
Speaker ANow let's talk baseball.
Speaker AAll right, welcome back.
Speaker AEpisode 17.
Speaker AAnd we're all.
Speaker AWe're all here.
Speaker AAnd Rick is here two and three times.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CRev it up.
Speaker BCharged up.
Speaker AWell, it's.
Speaker AGlad to see everybody back and.
Speaker AAnd looking forward to a good discussion.
Speaker AToday we're talking about playing in the postseason, and it's something that you, you know, some guys never get to do it, and it's a.
Speaker AIt's a big deal.
Speaker ASo anyway, we're gonna start off today by talking about five things that every.
Speaker AThat teams must have to get to the postseason.
Speaker ASo, Ethan, once you kick us off, what are five things that a team must have to get to the post?
Speaker CMy son goes, man, the first thing.
Speaker DJust, I think it has to be mindset.
Speaker DIt has to be the.
Speaker DIt has to be the goal to be there in the first place.
Speaker DSometimes you see some of these teams and it's.
Speaker DEspecially when you get to these lower market teams that aren't in contention and you hear guys talk about it.
Speaker DI've heard a lot of guys talk about, like, the Marlins in specific, you know, pros that are done playing.
Speaker DGuys are just there to be there.
Speaker DThey're not there to compete.
Speaker DAnd so it's just a very different expectation that you have, you know, you know, in a big market like New York or la, where they're expecting to win every time, the whole team has to have that same mindset.
Speaker AYeah, I agree.
Speaker AGeorge, what do you think?
Speaker CYou know, I agree with that because when I had gone from the Reds to the Mets, I, I thought everybody during spring training or getting themselves prepared physically, mentally for a winning season, but a lot of guys are just there.
Speaker CIt's like in a holding pattern and hoping to get to some of them, hoping to get to another team, and some are just there to hold on, play a few more years.
Speaker CBut you got to have that mindset.
Speaker CLike Ethan was saying, you had to have the talent.
Speaker CThe other part, you had to have the talent to do it and experience, go along with that talent.
Speaker CBecause with the Reds, you had a good nucleus there.
Speaker CYou had a rose, you had a bench Perez.
Speaker CSo now you can build around it.
Speaker CAnd Bob Housing, to me, was the best as the general manager putting a team together.
Speaker CAnd we had speed, power, speed.
Speaker CSometimes you can have too much power.
Speaker CSo back with the braves, you had three guys that hit 40 or more home runs in the lineup, but they weren't winning.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CAnd there's guys that.
Speaker COh, yeah, I look at the ratio of home runs or home runs to RBIs.
Speaker CIs that guy hitting home runs with men on base or hitting solo home runs.
Speaker CSo it makes a big difference.
Speaker CSo having that experience and having that talent, very important.
Speaker AI have a question, though.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker ASo today it seems like.
Speaker AWell, I mean, the Reds just did this too.
Speaker ALike, you get to the.
Speaker ARight before that trade deadline and people are trying to bring in the whatever talent they don't have, you know, with trades and that kind of thing, free agency, whatever, and trying to load up with that extra talent toward the end of the year.
Speaker AYou know, when you talk about 75, 76, 77, those guys we, we know about those of you who were there putting in the work, doing the thing, but did they make moves and bring in anybody in the middle of the year?
Speaker AOn those, on those teams, the ones.
Speaker CWe were bringing in, it's more of a pitch hitter, a pitcher.
Speaker CThe starting lineup, you had guys, I remember back, someone was talking about, where would Bottle be in that lineup?
Speaker CHe wouldn't play.
Speaker CHe couldn't play.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker CBut that, that starting eight, you know, they were solid.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo we just.
Speaker CAnother key to it.
Speaker CMaybe Rick.
Speaker CMaybe taking it from Rick.
Speaker CBut winning team had to have a strong bench.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo you have to have guys to come in, not only pinch hit, but give a guy a day of rest or so that one day make a big difference.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWe talked about Dan Dreeson being there with Dreeson.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd Doug Flynn, he would like on Sundays.
Speaker CJoe Morgan wouldn't play on Sunday, but Doug came in and did a quality job.
Speaker CBill Plummer behind Johnny.
Speaker CSo it's important to have that strong bench.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker ARick, what you got?
Speaker BWell, a couple you guys went over leadership.
Speaker BManager, that's GM and manager being on the same, just having a philosophy.
Speaker BBut I would add pitching depth.
Speaker BGotta have some pitching depth.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSomeone that gets injured or your bullpen has to be, you know, have some good bullpen depth.
Speaker BGuys that are probably only going to be one or two or your closer and stuff.
Speaker BSo pitching depth, um, you know, you gotta have guys that can throw strikes.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CThat rubber arm like Pedro Bourbon had a rubber on, he could pitch every day.
Speaker AYeah, well, yeah.
Speaker AAnd I think one of the things that I, I see in a.
Speaker AIn a team that makes it to the postseason is consistency like you've just played, you know, better than 160 games.
Speaker AWere you consistent in your performance or are you expecting that people are just going to heat up in the last month or two of the, of the season?
Speaker AThat's rarely going to happen.
Speaker AI mean, there are only so many Reggie Jackson's in the world.
Speaker AI mean the idea that somebody's just going to out of nowhere start producing things that they haven't been producing all year long is, is very, very unlikely.
Speaker ASo you're more likely to reach that postseason if you've been steadily producing all year long.
Speaker AEthan, you were talking right before the show about how Rose didn't get quite the same recog because of his consistency of base hitting rather than his lack of slugging.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker ABut yet it was that consistency over all of his career that led him to, you know, over 4,000 hits.
Speaker ASo, you know, is your team consistent?
Speaker AAre your pitchers consistently having good outings?
Speaker AAre your batters consistently hitting and moving runners, getting on base, moving people around, doing that kind of thing?
Speaker AOr have you just been lucky enough to win a certain percentage of your game with home runs and slugging?
Speaker ASlugging.
Speaker AAnd if that's the case, you're not going to slug your way into the, into the postseason.
Speaker AThat's just probably not going to happen.
Speaker CBut low scoring games is indicative of the team, is the team play because being able to manufacture runs.
Speaker CYou go out there say if Joe Morgan gets on bases, he's still second or then still third.
Speaker CAnd, and yes, George Foster drives him in.
Speaker CSo it's one to nothing.
Speaker CWe went in the game well, some guys, he gets on first base and they, he doesn't try to steal.
Speaker CAnd the guy trying to hit home runs to getting a base hit and it's like, next man up, keep going, keep going.
Speaker CBecause we, we would be down in the bottom of the ninth and that one base hit because the mindset of the other team is like, oh no here it's coming, it's coming.
Speaker CI remember we were playing the Phillies in the playoff.
Speaker CI think it was 76 or so.
Speaker CThey actually have four guys warming up in the bullpen.
Speaker CIt's like you can't pitch them all at once.
Speaker AThat's funny.
Speaker BI do, I will say this because having pitching depth, you're going to have injuries.
Speaker BSo George, talking about how pitching was then to now, because before we talked.
Speaker CAbout the biggest difference is the starters going longer.
Speaker BThere we go.
Speaker CBecause their expectation.
Speaker CBack to what Ethan saying is the mindset, if I couldn't go Five.
Speaker CI can go five.
Speaker CBut these guys, we want.
Speaker CThey wanted to go.
Speaker CThey really wanted to finish the game, but at least go on a quality seven or eight innings.
Speaker CSo it takes pressure off.
Speaker COff that bullpen.
Speaker CSo when a guy goes out there, he.
Speaker CHe's not saying, oh, 90 pitches or whatever, whatever it takes.
Speaker CI remember, I think in the World Series, 70, 75 with the Red Sox, I think tion had over 200 pitches in the game.
Speaker DCrazy.
Speaker DUnheard of.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThey'd lose their minds over a stat like that these days.
Speaker DWell, my other.
Speaker DMy next one kind of goes hand in hand with both of those, and it's longevity or stamina, because going into the postseason, you could play 20 or more really intense games.
Speaker DYeah, that's different than, you know, an early game in the spring where maybe you don't even play the whole game and, you know, you're just trying to keep fresh.
Speaker DBut you have to be able to play that full 162.
Speaker DWell, spring training, 162.
Speaker DAnd then, you know, more for playoffs and.
Speaker DWell, let me ask you this.
Speaker DHow much more does the intensity of that game drain you as a player?
Speaker CWell, as far as I would bring up take.
Speaker CYou need more energy.
Speaker CIt wasn't draining, but it gives you more energy.
Speaker CBut you gotta get yourself, your body prepared for that.
Speaker CAnd once in spring training, it's important to get your mind, your body ready for that long run.
Speaker CBecause before the playoffs start, you play close to 200 games, because in spring training is at least 30 or more games, because they're.
Speaker CThey're looking to make money in spring training before you just train to get yourself ready.
Speaker CBut these guys, sometimes I think they start too early, but they.
Speaker CThey want to make the money.
Speaker CSo it can be draining if you haven't been there before.
Speaker CAnd because guys are not prepared for the long run and then that intensity, being able to have that intensity day in and day out.
Speaker CAnd I said, well, we'll play well the first two or three games, and then.
Speaker CThen we go out there and give it up.
Speaker COr so to speak, like back in ten.
Speaker CAs remember, Djokovic had was two up on Fritz.
Speaker CAnd so now his strategy is get two up on Fritz because Fritz has a good, good serve.
Speaker CBut he laid off that third set because, okay, I know it's going to go five.
Speaker CI mean, it has to go.
Speaker CIf it goes five, I gotta be prepared.
Speaker CBut if he would go hard, too hard on that, on that third set, he may not be ready.
Speaker CYeah, but with Pete Rose, he said, don't give a nut.
Speaker CBat up.
Speaker CI see guys giving that.
Speaker CBats up.
Speaker CAnd like you, the Reds the other day had five to nothing, and they figure we got it.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CDo you have teams like Toronto, they're going to come at you, they're not going to just lay down.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AAnother one that I had to go in there was you got to have team unity.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ATo be together of one mind.
Speaker AI mean, the number of times, Georgia, you've talked about how when the team is truly functioning well, it just, it functions as one organism on the field, but it also has to also the engine just purr, have that mindset off the field as well.
Speaker AYou got to be picking up your teammates.
Speaker AYou got to be looking out for each other.
Speaker CYou got to get your rest.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, that's a good point.
Speaker CCan't have any Red Bull.
Speaker CThings like that make your chest pop out.
Speaker CPop, man, you think you're.
Speaker CYou think you're going faster than you really are.
Speaker CWell, you're in the same place, but the one, that other one that stands out is they really specialize.
Speaker CSo now in.
Speaker CIn a series.
Speaker CSo they're not going to pitch to a certain guy.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CSo now they were like, judge, you know, they'll.
Speaker CYou walk him.
Speaker COkay, let's go to the next guy.
Speaker CBut during the season, you know, they may pitch to the pitch to him.
Speaker CHe's going to hit the ball a mile out of Yellowstone.
Speaker CBut in the playoffs, you don't walk him because like Ethan was saying, most of the game's going to be low scoring.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CSo his at bat is going to be important.
Speaker CSo we can let him.
Speaker CLet him hit or not hit.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo I mean, having.
Speaker AHaving that.
Speaker AThat strategy intact and knowing exactly how you're going to attack it and having your team together, you know, really.
Speaker AI remember watching a thing on.
Speaker AOn the 90 reds that went wire to wire and the incredible unity that they had going on inside everybody pulling for everybody else.
Speaker AI imagine it was much like that when you were doing it.
Speaker AI don't see how you get to the postseason and survive it if you don't have that.
Speaker AYou can't have somebody looking out for themselves.
Speaker CNo, it's an individual commitment for a group effort.
Speaker CAnd I watched not only Reds, but other teams, as far as they complain that they're not winning or not scoring runs, but like the Yankees, you know, they think they need to score eight or nine runs because they don't trust their bullpen.
Speaker CBut you find at the end of the game, they lose by one or two runs because they didn't situational hitting or situational play.
Speaker CI see so many guys that don't know where to throw the ball.
Speaker CThey don't know when you're on base, when the tag up.
Speaker CTheir guys on second base, a ground ball's hit to the left side.
Speaker CThey're running at the third.
Speaker CSo where's this guy going exactly?
Speaker BRunning into an out.
Speaker CRun into an out.
Speaker CAnd then I watch and see when he go back to the dugout.
Speaker CWhen we played, if we did something incorrectly, we have a coach at the step letting you know that's not letting you know what you didn't do and correct it.
Speaker CBut nowadays you just go back and put his bat and sit down.
Speaker CBut we're still intense watching.
Speaker CWatching what what we need to do to.
Speaker CTo are what.
Speaker CWhat we going to contribute to the game.
Speaker CThat's going to be productive.
Speaker AOkay, so does anybody else have anything more for name five before we move on?
Speaker DI'm pretty much out.
Speaker AOkay, cool.
Speaker CI'm sorry.
Speaker AGo ahead.
Speaker CPete Rose made sure that we always were prepared for the.
Speaker CFor preparation for the pictures, the rotation.
Speaker CYou think that, well, what's the big difference about rotation?
Speaker CBut your mind is like a computer, so you start to compute, what did he throw you before?
Speaker CWhat is his repertoire?
Speaker CSo you're prepared when you go up there.
Speaker CAnd I always go on the bench and watch the opposing pitcher warm up because you're going to want to watch his release point and make sure it's the same.
Speaker CBecause I remember one guy, he was in the bullpen, he was.
Speaker CHe threw overhand majority of the time, but this time he was practicing throwing sidearm.
Speaker CSo when you first, you don't want to see it the first time at bat.
Speaker CSo I got a chance to see it in the bullpen and.
Speaker CBut it's also just reviewing make sure that you see in the release point, like Sutcliffe, he had that hesitation in his road, his, his, his mechanics.
Speaker CSo he would jump at you, but his arm is still back.
Speaker CAnd a lot of guys jump move at that certain point.
Speaker CThey had that big overhead curveball, but it's like it's a dance or choreography.
Speaker CYou got to have that timing and you don't want to wait till the game starts for that to see it.
Speaker ASo you finished the season last year exhausted from all the travel in the tournaments, and you tossed your gear in a bag where it's been sitting all winter.
Speaker ANow you're ready for another year.
Speaker ABut your favorite glove that fits just right is an error waiting to happen.
Speaker AThe leather is dry, the laces are brittle.
Speaker AAnd this year you're on a new team with new colors.
Speaker AAnd it sure would be cool if it matched well.
Speaker AWouldn't it be great if you had a glove guy who could help you out with that?
Speaker AYou do.
Speaker AHis name is Ethan and he owns Glovehound baseball glove repair shop in Fairfield, Ohio.
Speaker AJust contact him@glovehound.com and upload pictures of your glove.
Speaker AHe'll give you a call back to talk it over and then you can send it in for a repair.
Speaker ARelays, recondition, whatever you need.
Speaker AIf you're in the area, you can even just stop by the shop.
Speaker AThat way you don't have to bother with shipping.
Speaker AAnd a lot of times he can even fix it while you wait.
Speaker ARawlings, Wilson, Mizuno, All Star, Nakona, he's seen them all.
Speaker AAnd he's helped players at all levels, from beginners to pros.
Speaker ALast year he worked on a glove that Jose Trevino used in the World Series.
Speaker AAnd he can help you, too.
Speaker AYou can find Glovehound on Google, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and on the web@glovehound.com.
Speaker Ayou're only going to get busier.
Speaker ASo reach out today and give your glove the love it deserves at Glovehound.
Speaker AOkay, so what I want to talk about now is, is how is the post, how is postseason different, the play different from regular season play?
Speaker AThere has to be a different feeling in the locker room ahead of time, a different satisfaction or dissatisfaction after the game than there is in a normal, you know, regular season game.
Speaker AI don't know, George, orient me there.
Speaker AWhat's it.
Speaker AWhat's.
Speaker CWell, the team that's going to win, you're going to make the fewest mistakes out there, mentally and physically.
Speaker CBut you.
Speaker CBecause they have one game, playoffs, and that's a lot of intensity that's involved.
Speaker CBut the manager.
Speaker CSo now everybody's on board.
Speaker CI don't care who pitched before, everybody's on board.
Speaker CAnd you don't know who's going.
Speaker CThe guy who may start the next game, if you win, may have to come into this game.
Speaker CSo you really got to shuffle your.
Speaker CI think the pitching staff is the one that you really had to shuffle a lot.
Speaker CAnd I remember, I think it was 72 Baltimore Orioles.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAgainst the Pirates, they had four, 20 game winners, so they had to decide on who's going to be in the rotation, who's going to go to the bullpen.
Speaker CAnd because you're not going to, like, say, have that long series, so you're not Going to utilize all of those guys as for starters.
Speaker CSo deciding on that and how long are you going to have that guy out there?
Speaker CBecause you can't.
Speaker CYou got to say, okay, I'm going to limit that guy to two or three runs and I'm going to take him out.
Speaker CSo you got to be.
Speaker CSparky was great at that.
Speaker CHaving that, I guess intuition, knowing that, okay, it's time to make that change.
Speaker CBut I think the biggest difference is the rotation, the pitching rotation, especially when you have a one game series and, and even with, with our like say the World Series, because it's consistent from when we play into now, it's going to be 2, 3, 2.
Speaker CAs far as the games you play, you want to be able to play three in your, in your city, but then again you end up in their city like we did in 70, 76.
Speaker CSo the fact is you want to get, get started early because you.
Speaker CSeven games.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd you got to make every game, every pitch is very important.
Speaker CSo put value on every at bat every game.
Speaker CBecause they don't assume, well, we'll win next game.
Speaker CBecause when we lost the game against the Red Sox six to nothing that first game, like, whoa, we had to wake up that these guys don't respect us.
Speaker CWe got to go out there, we assume that, you know, we're the big red machine and they're going to be intimidated.
Speaker CBut no.
Speaker CSo we came back and won the next game.
Speaker CI think either three, two or two, one.
Speaker CBut no, five games were only settled by one run.
Speaker CAnd so every run really was important.
Speaker ATalk a little bit about.
Speaker AYou mentioned a minute ago about the decision of when to pull a pitcher.
Speaker ANowadays everything is about pitch count, pitch count, pitch count.
Speaker ABut back then they were maybe making the decision with regard to how many runs or how.
Speaker AWhat was.
Speaker AWhat was the more the driving statistic that made somebody say I need to, I need to maybe pull this guy or I need to leave him in.
Speaker CWell, you're looking at the fact that, okay, what.
Speaker CHow many runs that you as a team average.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd so you don't want to get too far behind and in a short series as such and feel that you're going to catch up because everything going to be different.
Speaker CYou're not going to maybe pitch to a Tony Perez or Johnny Bench.
Speaker CAnd so somebody else has to do it.
Speaker CAnd that's the one thing that I, you have to have a guy in a RBI or clutch situation that wants to be there.
Speaker CDon't force him to be there.
Speaker CAnd De La Cruz, I Know he has like 79 or 81, nine RBIs, but still, I look back when.
Speaker CHow many RBIs he had in an intense pressure situation.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CBut now I.
Speaker CCause that guy, I like him.
Speaker CIf he's driving 81 runs bad leading off, that is great, right?
Speaker CHow many runs did he leave on base batting third.
Speaker BThird or four.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd no outs.
Speaker CSo it's being in the right place.
Speaker CAnd we, we.
Speaker CWe knew our role.
Speaker CAnd Sparky makes sure that you're in the right role in that lineup because you have a.
Speaker CIt's not.
Speaker CIt's important.
Speaker CNot.
Speaker CThe most important part is how do you line up the guys?
Speaker CYou have a good lineup, but how you line them up.
Speaker CCase in point, Griffey was batting seventh in the game one of the 75 series.
Speaker CAnd then I don't know who had a meeting or what, but now he's batting second the second game.
Speaker CSo now you have more speed up in front of the lineup.
Speaker CAnd the Reds have a tendency to have speed, speed in a power situation.
Speaker CAnd it's like, I don't respect him.
Speaker CI'll pitch around this guy.
Speaker CBut you, you have a bench up and you look in on deck there you have a Perez, and then you look in the hole, there's George Foster.
Speaker CLike, you gotta decide on, you know, pick your poison.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou can't.
Speaker AYou can't pass on everybody.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CBut Jim Palmer probably would.
Speaker CThe reason I'm saying that, this guy, he.
Speaker CHe brags about the fact I never did give up a grand slam.
Speaker CSo if, if a prez is up.
Speaker COh, no, the bases are low.
Speaker CHe may walk him to get to a guy who's not a home run.
Speaker AHitter, Give up the run.
Speaker ABut he did give up the grand.
Speaker CI did give him grass Lamb.
Speaker AThat's funny.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I guess I can imagine if you're going to get in a game, if you're in a postseason game or even a World Series game, and you know that the average on your team is that you'll see four at bats.
Speaker AYou know, you just.
Speaker AYou just know that your team generally gets through the lineup enough that you're going to get three to four at bats.
Speaker AThose three to four bats are now way more intense than they were before the postseason.
Speaker ASo that leads me to.
Speaker AMy next question is, do you change your approach?
Speaker ADo you change the.
Speaker AWhat do you change about your.
Speaker AOr do you change anything about your approach to the plate when you're in a postseason game?
Speaker CGood example.
Speaker CMy first at bat, I would take the first pitch just to make sure that I'm picking up the release point and especially nobody on base.
Speaker CSo what I had seen in the bullpen, I want to make sure I see on the mound.
Speaker CBut now, in a situation that men are on base, my first at bat, I'm not giving up that pitch.
Speaker CAnd so, so now it's putting more value on each, each pitch.
Speaker CAnd I say pitch compared to strike, right?
Speaker CIf the ball is in the hitting, in my hitting zone, I'm swinging a bat.
Speaker CAnd that's a big difference.
Speaker CToday the guys are number one, thinking too much about pitch count.
Speaker CAnd, and I tell them that you, when you go up to bat, wear one uniform, meaning that you got to wear a uniform.
Speaker CYou wear the uniform of the umpire or uniform of the team.
Speaker CSo you want to go up there and say, I'm going to, I'm going to judge.
Speaker COkay, if it's a ball or strike.
Speaker CNo, if it's in your hitting zone, swing the bat.
Speaker CI see too many guys going back, shaking her head, that wasn't a strike.
Speaker CI said, no, it wasn't a strike.
Speaker CBut you can hit that ball.
Speaker CThe bases are loaded.
Speaker CSwing the bat.
Speaker CI don't want you just to walk.
Speaker CSwing the bat.
Speaker AYeah, because you know, you got that.
Speaker AYou got three, maybe four at bats and you got to make them count, right?
Speaker BThere you go.
Speaker ASo, Rick, as a coach, let's, let's, let's equate this to, okay, you've got a youth team, you're in a, you're in a tournament situation.
Speaker AYou guys have played five, six games in a weekend, and you're, you're in game five or six, and you're, you know, it's, it's getting intense and you're going to head into these, these last couple of games.
Speaker AHow do you handle that differently than, than games earlier in the, in the.
Speaker BI think a lot of it starts, is preparing your, your, your, your kids during practice.
Speaker BBecause I think that some guys throw too many pitches during BP, like 12 or 15 pitches and stuff.
Speaker BAnd I always say, man, it's not a hitting marathon.
Speaker BYou know, you throw in BP, you.
Speaker CGet.
Speaker BDuring live BP probably 7 to 8.
Speaker BAnd then when you get to situational hitting, you shrink it down.
Speaker BBecause now if you get in a whole lot of pitches during practice, when you come to a game, there's only about three to four good pitchers per at bat.
Speaker BSo think about that.
Speaker BThree to four, you get 12 pitches.
Speaker BIf you get three.
Speaker BSo now you got to narrow it down, and that'll help a kid really narrow down to your approach.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BEverything starts.
Speaker BOh, oh.
Speaker CHunt that fastball or give them a count.
Speaker BGive account.
Speaker BYes, you give them a count.
Speaker BOne.
Speaker BOh.
Speaker BAnd then you give them situationals and you do that over, over again.
Speaker BThose kids start gaining confidence because they've done it before.
Speaker BYes, yes.
Speaker BBut you got to do that during practice, especially for the youth because again they overthink.
Speaker BThey're not at the level to where George was at or where I coached at.
Speaker BSo you gotta do that over and over again.
Speaker BSo now when they get into a game, they just not overthinking, they being aggressive now.
Speaker DSimulation.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker DEspecially for young kids who don't have experience in that situ.
Speaker DIn that situation all the time you gotta simulate that.
Speaker DSo when they are in it they.
Speaker BFeel a lot more prepared.
Speaker DNo, that makes sense.
Speaker BI just had a kid that uh.
Speaker BSo one of the things that I do a lot during my live VP is I tell them I'm going to make it difficult for you during our practice.
Speaker BSo in the game you'll understand what you're looking for.
Speaker BYes, you're prepared.
Speaker BSo I throw change ups.
Speaker BI throw stuff because I think in today everybody talks about velocity.
Speaker BVelocity.
Speaker BAnd you know you're looking for a fastball.
Speaker BBut if I know that you're doing that as a pitcher.
Speaker BBut oh man, I'll throw something off speed to you better get you off like George was saying.
Speaker BGet you off on your front side a little bit.
Speaker BGet you chasing.
Speaker BNow I got you.
Speaker BNow my fastball is going to be even better now because I do that all speed to you.
Speaker CBut what two things.
Speaker COne is the, which stands out is the approach.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CSo what is your approach?
Speaker CAnd I teach you know the numbers starting from, from you is 3, 2, 1.
Speaker CAs far as your approach.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CBut you're, you're bad actually going 1, 2, 3.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CBut a lot of guys are going 1, 2, 3 on every count.
Speaker CAnd so now a ball that's inside you may hit it, but it's going to go foul.
Speaker BIt's going to go foul.
Speaker CBut the ball that's outside you're going to miss.
Speaker CSo if you, you got to stay in the, in the, in the zone longer or in the account longer going 3, 2, 1.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd so that's, that's very important.
Speaker CBut the last one is they coaches is important to put a kid in a situation that he can be successful.
Speaker BYes, yes.
Speaker AWell let me ask you this.
Speaker ASo let's talk about advanced, what I would consider advanced hitting skills.
Speaker AThings like, are bunting and you know, things like that when do you find that in a postseason situation or in a last few games of the tournament situation, you're reaching for those advanced skills more than you would in another game.
Speaker AAnd so all the more important for them to know them.
Speaker CThat's why you gotta do it in practice.
Speaker BDon't hold it back.
Speaker CIt's another tool.
Speaker CI was laughing early because we were.
Speaker CI had my first five guys, they were bunting, and I heard somebody in the crowd said that's all you guys could do is bunt.
Speaker CI wanted to say it's been successful.
Speaker BYes, yes, yes.
Speaker CBut bunting not only helps you to learn how to bunt, but.
Speaker CBut to see the ball.
Speaker ASure.
Speaker CAnd lot.
Speaker CI want a right hander to be, well bun to the off the field so you can see the ball longer in the hitting zone.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CA lot of guys thinking that, okay, he's bunny.
Speaker CPracticing bunny to bun.
Speaker CNo, practicing bunny to see the ball.
Speaker CTo see the ball is going to help you become a better hitter.
Speaker BIt sure do.
Speaker BYou let.
Speaker BBecause you're going to let the ball travel and.
Speaker BAnd you see the ball a lot better.
Speaker BAnother thing is that I remember one of my son's coaches, we supposed to smash in his team.
Speaker BSo they threw slow.
Speaker BEverybody hitting pop ups.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BHe says, the next guy we're going to bunt though every one through nine.
Speaker BAnd he said, if anyone swings, you guess what?
Speaker BWe came back.
Speaker BIt worked.
Speaker BHe said, whatever it is, I don't care if he gave you a sacrifice or drag, bunt or push or whatever it is, you got to execute it.
Speaker BWe ended up coming back.
Speaker BI think we went through nine.
Speaker BMark, man, he is a brilliant guy.
Speaker BAnd so we did that for an inning or two.
Speaker BI think the next two to three innings, we, we.
Speaker BSo he took it off, everybody started hitting line drives.
Speaker BWe run.
Speaker BRules the team.
Speaker BYeah, that's funny.
Speaker CAdjustment.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BWe made the adjustment because a lot.
Speaker AOf people's mindset is, we've talked about this before, you know, a kid, or it could be any batter.
Speaker AI'm sure the pros go through this.
Speaker AYou know, your mindset is, I'm gonna go up there and I'm gonna have the best at bat I can have.
Speaker AWell, in the best at bat I could have is to knock one out of here and then less than that, you know, and really, until they start thinking, wait a minute, the best at bat I can have is what the situation calls for right now.
Speaker CI like that.
Speaker ASo I need to put it over there, I need to put it over there.
Speaker AI need to put it on the ground.
Speaker AI need to take as many as I can and try and see if I can draw a walk out of this guy.
Speaker AI need to do, you know, whatever.
Speaker ASo you know, what, what is that?
Speaker AWhat is the best at bat you can have and when to try and get your players to start thinking about that.
Speaker ABecause when you get to those later games, you're in that postseason game, you're in that, that last tournament game and you need to reach for those advanced skills, man.
Speaker AIf we haven't done that all year, you're, you could be coming up dry, going to the well for that.
Speaker CBut that's the situation will dictate what you need to do.
Speaker CYes, but you got to be prepared for it early.
Speaker CI mean, back in spring training.
Speaker CSo you're doing it.
Speaker CThey say, do what?
Speaker CDo what you need.
Speaker CWhat got you there?
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker CSo keep doing that all during the season because I, to me it's a weapon, the bunning, the stealing.
Speaker CBecause I said once you get on first base, the first pitch, you're going.
Speaker CThat really.
Speaker CI said you're going.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CI don't care if they know that you're going, you're going, or I'm going to bunt and run.
Speaker CI'm a hit and run and.
Speaker CBut I'm going to create more strategy or excitement out there.
Speaker AWell, the other thing is you can't use those advanced hitting techniques if there's nobody on base.
Speaker AIt doesn't gain you anything.
Speaker ASo, you know, also being very cognizant of whatever it takes to get on base, watching for that drop, third strike, taking off.
Speaker AAnyway, when you get that single, you're not dogging it, you're hustling everything you can get to get to first base.
Speaker AYou'll do anything to get to the bag.
Speaker CWhen you're on base, be prepared to advance, to advance.
Speaker BShe has all in the dirt.
Speaker BA lot of.
Speaker CYeah, I was getting ready to comment on that.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CStop reading my mind.
Speaker CSo I tell the guys, especially at third base, look down in front of home plate.
Speaker CIt will tell you where the direction of the ball.
Speaker CIf it's going to be a ground ball, it's going to be a line drive.
Speaker CSo at first base it's going to be in the dirt.
Speaker CBe ready to advance to the next base.
Speaker CDon't wait till the ball is blocked away.
Speaker CYou got to be there.
Speaker CI see, I see McLean, I see guys who got good speed.
Speaker CThey're still at.
Speaker CI said, what are you doing if I'm the first base coach?
Speaker CI said, are you still here they.
Speaker BAin'T taking secondary leads.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThey are really having that fear of getting thrown out.
Speaker AAnother question I had is how do managers coach a team differently in the postseason than they do in the regular season?
Speaker ALike what, what kind of things you played for one of the greatest of all time.
Speaker AWhat kind of things might Sparky have done differently in the postseason than he would have during the regular season or was there anything?
Speaker CYeah, well, the main thing is they, they letting the pitcher in his mind said, I'm only giving that guy so many innings as far as pitching and, and during the course of the season, you know, so like a Freddie Norman, you know, you know, during his outing, he's going to give up a home run.
Speaker CJust hopefully there's nobody's on base like Tom Hume.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CAnd so but maybe be able to get him out before that does happen.
Speaker CBut also the fact that, okay, we have a three or four run lead and here he is trying to pick somebody off.
Speaker CI want to let him know that run's not important.
Speaker CI want the guy at the plate, get him out.
Speaker CBut these guys trying to pick somebody off at second base, they got three run lead and two outs.
Speaker CSo go get the batter.
Speaker BGo get the batter.
Speaker CIt's just making sure that you're knowing what you're doing out there and, and not creating momentum for the other ball club.
Speaker CAnd maybe you're going to like a Morgan is he knows I'm one of the smartest guys in the game when he gets on base.
Speaker CHe knowing that, oh, they know I'm going, but I'm not.
Speaker CI don't have any fear.
Speaker CI can make it there.
Speaker CI can get a good jump.
Speaker CSo now he's still second.
Speaker CSo it gives.
Speaker CNow I don't have to hit a home run to drive him in.
Speaker CAnd then he knowing that Eric Davis made the statement, said after you still second, what's, what's the next best pitch to go on everybody?
Speaker CHe said the next pitch.
Speaker CSo being able to be aggressive on the basis and I always talk about confidence help you to overcome the self doubt.
Speaker CYeah, but you got to go out there and give it a try.
Speaker CIf you don't give it a try, you don't know if you can do it.
Speaker CBut I'd say mainly with the pitching staff and, and pitch hitting spark in May in certain situations.
Speaker CBut with the starting eight, you know, who are you going to pitch it for?
Speaker CUnless you want to fight.
Speaker ABut would he have had more of a, of a short leash for, you know, guys out there and he Just doesn't have it together and he's just not getting to see some air bump.
Speaker AYou're out, right?
Speaker CWell, as you have a ground ball pitcher hitting the guy's head and fly balls, warm up.
Speaker CGet everybody warm up or tell the outfielders, make sure you're way back.
Speaker CWay back.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CYeah, but the other one, we didn't have a DH before the 76 in the world Series.
Speaker CSo now who's going to pinch hit?
Speaker CWhen will you pinch hit for the pitcher?
Speaker CHe may be pitching well, but we need those runs out there.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CSo being able to take him out even though he's doing well, but we need those runs.
Speaker AWould there have been a lot more of, you know, okay, so I got to pinch it for this guy, but that means I got to move three other guys around different places and doing a lot of that.
Speaker AOr it's just mainly just a swap out.
Speaker CIt's a swap out because you have a, the, the bullpen was relieved by committee.
Speaker CSo those guys, they, it's like lights out when they, when they come out there.
Speaker CBut knowing when, when to do it.
Speaker CBut, but the main thing is like you have guys bases loaded and two outs.
Speaker CYou want to pinch it for that picture, right?
Speaker CBecause you don't want to just give it, give an out up.
Speaker CYou give it, give, give yourself a chance.
Speaker AYeah, you've said that a couple of times today.
Speaker AAnd that is something that I've, I, I was always taught when I was a kid that, that, that I just don't see today is, is the, the just insistence on not giving up an opportunity.
Speaker ALike I am going to make the most of every single opportunity.
Speaker AI am not going to sit down if I don't, if I didn't go down swinging.
Speaker AYou're not going to write a backwards K to my name.
Speaker BIt's just not going to happen.
Speaker CI know it's not going to happen.
Speaker CI don't know if they have an incentive in the contract how many strikeouts I can get by taking.
Speaker CBut, but I don't know exactly.
Speaker CBut I, I just guess that a manager can win or win or lose after you win or lose 10 to 11 games or 11 to 10.
Speaker CWell, 10 to 11 games they say.
Speaker CHow?
Speaker CWell, like the other night, the Reds were losing by two runs.
Speaker CMan on first and second, bunt the guy over right or hit and run.
Speaker CDo something different to get those runners moving.
Speaker CAnd that put the batter hitter into a batter runner into a successful situation to succeed.
Speaker CPinch running from someone if he's on third base and he needs Some speed there.
Speaker CBecause a sacrifice fly, you don't want it to be.
Speaker CYou don't want to be so close.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker ALet me ask you this.
Speaker ASo the grind of a postseason where you're just like, okay, this is something that you know is kind of unique to baseball players and like, you know, you're.
Speaker AEverything is a series, everything is five games of this and seven games of that.
Speaker AAnd so you know going in that you're not going to have a champion at this level until we've played several games.
Speaker AAnd then you're going to go to the next level, you're going to play several games.
Speaker AThen you go to the World Series, you're going to play several games.
Speaker AAnd you know, how.
Speaker ADo you.
Speaker ADo you have any.
Speaker AWere there any secrets to surviving that as a team, to keeping everybody together so that people aren't getting worn out by the.
Speaker ABy the post season grind.
Speaker CIt starts with conditioning.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CAnd even during the course of the year conditioning, because I'm not lifting heavy weights, but I'm lifting maybe 30 or 30 pound dumbbells.
Speaker CBut your body doesn't know how much weight you're lifting, but you got it still getting on that treadmill, getting on that bike.
Speaker CKeep doing those things that you were doing before.
Speaker CAnd your mind may tell you that you're tired, but you got to work through that because you're knowing what you need to do.
Speaker CBut each game, focus on each game at a time.
Speaker CNot looking, oh, well, we win best of five, we will be fine.
Speaker CWe lost the first two.
Speaker CWe'll be fine.
Speaker CBefore you know it, you're going to be at home.
Speaker CSo every game, we keep emphasizing every game, every at bat is very important.
Speaker CPut value on that.
Speaker CSo when you go out there, put it all out on the field.
Speaker CDon't try to say something for, for next game.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker AAnd I imagine it's if you see one of your, one of your teammates are struggling, they're coming apart, the grinds getting to them, they're having it.
Speaker AYou know that that's a especially necessary time for everybody to come around to kind of, you know, you pick them up a little bit.
Speaker CWell, it's more so talking, it's like, you know, how do you feel?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CAnd, and like say in Joe's case is all my legs are sore things as such.
Speaker CSo I'm not trying to hit, hit home runs but I need to drive the ball in the gap and not expecting just a base hits going to drive him in and, but by him just being on base.
Speaker CBut the other team doesn't know that he's sore, he's hurt by him being on base.
Speaker CI'm still going to get more fastballs to hit.
Speaker CSo it's more of an urgency now.
Speaker CAnd, but in my case or Tony Perez's case, we, we swing at pitches that are in our zone.
Speaker CIt doesn't have to be a strike zone.
Speaker CAnd some guys, they have to have to be, there have to be a strike.
Speaker CAnd, and I see a lot of guys walking, but it's not, it's not always a strike for an umpire.
Speaker CI mean, I mean a ball to an umpire is, he's going to call you out.
Speaker CSo what do you do?
Speaker CYou can't change his mind.
Speaker CSo get up, go up there and get, be accountable.
Speaker CHave quality at bats.
Speaker CQuality at bats.
Speaker CNot just swinging at strikes.
Speaker CPitchers in your strike zone or hitting zone.
Speaker CAnd in batting practice, I said why didn't you swing at that?
Speaker CWell, it wasn't what the strike.
Speaker BPerfect.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CThen I started, I said I'm going to put the hit and run on, make that guy's wing at that pitch.
Speaker ASo like Rick, let's, let's segue back to working with, with young people now.
Speaker ASo you're, you got kids, they're naturally not going to be as mentally tough as professional baseball players who do this for a living.
Speaker ASo how do you as a coach keep them together in those high pressure situations to make sure that it doesn't get to get to them and wear them down?
Speaker BPractice, that's one of the, one of the main things.
Speaker BPractice and a lot of things going back to what George was saying about doing there was running poles and everything.
Speaker BI used to do sprint work with our guys during practice.
Speaker BYou know how the infield and the outfield kind of connects with a dirt and grass around here.
Speaker BSo of course you don't use a track.
Speaker BSo we'll run those curves.
Speaker BI'll run 20 and 30 yard curves.
Speaker BMan, we'll do that about three or four times.
Speaker BAnd then I tell the kids that, you know, on your own time you work on that.
Speaker BSo if you're, you're doing, you know, you can do, use dumbbells or you can do body weight, but I always emphasize doing sprint work and because I know that if, if you doing this then you're going to have a, you're going to be a little bit more mentally tough than the, than who we playing because we're going to be in more conditioned and you know, it's going to show the way we run the bases, the way we hit the ball, our.
Speaker BOur arms and.
Speaker BAnd all of that.
Speaker BSo that's where I would start off with.
Speaker BAnd that's how you build your mentality right there with your working out.
Speaker CBut the mental toughness is complemented by being physically ready.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker CBecause you're knowing that I'm tight today.
Speaker CWhy are you tired?
Speaker CBecause you didn't loosen up.
Speaker CYou didn't loosen up.
Speaker CYou didn't stretch back to what we said earlier.
Speaker CBeing prepared.
Speaker CPrepare yourself for that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CAnd now you're knowing that.
Speaker COkay, everything else is in order now.
Speaker CI just.
Speaker CThe mental aspect.
Speaker CI got to focus on the mental aspect.
Speaker CBut what's back to what Gregor's hand, the being able to be prepared for the situation.
Speaker CWhat does this situation call for?
Speaker CI don't need you to hit a home run, just hit a fly ball.
Speaker BYes, yes, yes, exactly.
Speaker AEthan, you.
Speaker AYou spent a lot of time as a pitcher in the later parts of your career, and you're in a tough game now.
Speaker AYou're looking at maybe being a coach here before too long and draw on your.
Speaker AOn your experience as a player and think toward being a coach.
Speaker AWhat do you think are important things to help keep your pitchers head on and keep your pitchers together in a high pressure game like a postseason or an end?
Speaker DWell, I mean, a huge thing is having confidence in the players behind you.
Speaker DAnd I was not a. I was not a strikeout pitcher by any means, and I played on a lot of teams.
Speaker DI'm sorry if you also played on those teams, but I played on a lot of teams with not surehanded fielders.
Speaker DSo I'll put it.
Speaker DTo put it nicely, I just.
Speaker DI didn't have a lot of confidence.
Speaker DAnd unfortunately, I played on a lot of teams where there really wasn't another guy to go to, so I didn't really have a choice, which was fine.
Speaker DAnd I think I learned a lot of mental toughness through that and knowing that at the end of the day, there's something bigger and, you know, it's, you know, it's not the end of the world.
Speaker DBut at the same time, you know, you got to be able to, like you're saying, breathe and stay calm.
Speaker DBut what I'm hearing more than anything is it's preseason preparation that really determines any of this preparation.
Speaker DPhysically, mentally, strategically, that, all of that.
Speaker DAnd when I look back on my playing career and how I would apply this, I played on a lot of teams that just were unprepared to be in tournaments.
Speaker DAnd so, so I.
Speaker DAnd it's a shame to put it like this.
Speaker DI can't think of a tournament that I ever walked into with a team where we went, yeah, we could win this, which means we shouldn't have been there.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker DAnd not to say that we can never play tournaments, but why would you play in a tournament that you don't think you can win?
Speaker CRight.
Speaker DIf you don't think you can win, then step back and prepare.
Speaker DAnd so I played, I played a lot of games that lacked intensity and lacked confidence because we just shouldn't have been there.
Speaker DWe just weren't ready.
Speaker DMaybe we could have been if we had prepared more.
Speaker DBut that's what I'm taking away from this, is the emphasis on, well, I put a star next to mindset because that matters.
Speaker DBut that goes hand in hand with self awareness of yourself and your team.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DYou have to be realistic of where you are to know if you can be there or not.
Speaker DSo, so that, that's what I go back to is, you know, if I coach in the future, there's, there's, there's so much more emphasis that needs to be put on even before the season starts in that off season.
Speaker DAnd then you just got to be real with yourself.
Speaker DAnd if you're not there, that's fine.
Speaker DNot everyone is going to be there, you know, so quickly.
Speaker DSo, so figure out where you are and how to get better from there rather than just constantly banging your head against the tournament dugout thinking that that's where you're supposed to be and you're not.
Speaker BYeah, I have to.
Speaker BAnd Ethan is spot on with that.
Speaker BAnd as I've gotten older, I'm starting to see a lot of stuff, man, that maybe kids aren't at this level.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's okay if they are at this level.
Speaker BAnd for me as a coach, because I've been in real travel baseball, I played at this level.
Speaker BI mean, we coached at this level.
Speaker BThis all I knew.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BBut when I started mdni, I start to see that the kids are at this level.
Speaker BThere's so much pressure put on them and all levels that I think parents and as a coach, you got to really come back and circle back around and get your ego out of the way and say, hey, maybe your team, maybe they're at this level.
Speaker BAnd that's okay.
Speaker BThat's okay.
Speaker BBut you have to.
Speaker BBut if you're going to what I've found out that you have to have a philosophy to develop them to get to a certain, to that level.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BAnd, and if those kids buy into what you're selling.
Speaker BThey're going to do it at home, they're going to do it on their own time, and then that's how you're going to circle back around and kids buy in and then you'll see them getting better.
Speaker AWell, the other thing is, you know, getting them to a higher level may very well take more than one season.
Speaker ASo you have to have the ability to hold your team together.
Speaker AYou can't have it fall apart at the end of every season.
Speaker CBut one thing as a, as a coach or a manager, I would not tolerate is lack of hustle.
Speaker CBecause it doesn't take talent to hustle.
Speaker BNo.
Speaker CSo you may make a mental or physical error, but if you're not hustling, you're coming out of the game.
Speaker CBecause I said I didn't take you out, you took yourself out.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CAnd so.
Speaker CBut it's going to let the other kids know that, that, that's not going to be tolerated.
Speaker CAnd that's the number one thing.
Speaker CYou got to hustle when you're on the field.
Speaker CBeing on time is also important, but we gotta hustle out there.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DAnd kind of along the lines of what you're saying is that players are just at different levels.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker DIf you were to take snippets out of any given podcast, I think you could deduce that we hate tournaments.
Speaker DAnd that's not necessarily true.
Speaker ANo, it's not.
Speaker DThere's a difference between a well prepared team who was ready to win a tournament and a team who's just doing it because everybody else does it.
Speaker DEvery time I played a Flames team, they expected to win that game every single time.
Speaker DThat.
Speaker DThat is one of.
Speaker DThat is one of the few organizations around here that hasn't been watered down.
Speaker DThere's just an expectation and.
Speaker DYeah, I don't know.
Speaker DI just, we just, I just played on teams that weren't ready and I think that we just need to prepare more.
Speaker AEven beyond that, every time you played a Flames team, we all expected that they would win.
Speaker DThat's the thing.
Speaker ALike, they were so successful.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker AEverybody expected they would win.
Speaker CBack to that word mindset.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker CBut I use tournaments as a test to see how much they've grown.
Speaker BYes, exactly.
Speaker DSo I think there's a place for it because, I mean, you know, like three, five, seven game series, it's not really realistic at the youth level.
Speaker DSo there's, there is, there is a place for that, especially if you want to see how you measure up and if you're good enough to.
Speaker DAnd you're Going to practice two and three times a week, and you're good enough to seriously compete in a tournament every weekend?
Speaker DSure, by all means, you know, whatever, but.
Speaker DBut that's.
Speaker DI just don't see that in the majority of teams out there.
Speaker DAnd I can 100% say that was not the case for any team I ever played.
Speaker AEthan is more than my podcast partner.
Speaker AHe's my son.
Speaker AAnd like every baseball parent, my first priority was his development as a player.
Speaker AEvery year, we'd start out with a new coach and a new team making new promises, only to end up playing the same old tournaments with little to no practice in between.
Speaker AYou know what I'm talking about.
Speaker AThat's why I'm so thankful that we found MDNI Academy.
Speaker AI first met Coach Rick over a decade ago when Ethan was just a kid.
Speaker AAnd I'll never forget the relief I felt watching his first lesson.
Speaker AI knew right then that no matter what team he played for, my son would have amazing, consistent instruction from someone who cared.
Speaker ARick has trained baseball and softball players at the select, travel, and even college levels, so I knew that Ethan could continue his excellence through training approach.
Speaker AFor his whole baseball career.
Speaker AHe learned hitting, pitching, catching, fielding, and more all in one place.
Speaker AMost of all, he learned to love the greatest game in the world and how to play it with character and integrity.
Speaker ASo if you're wearing yourself out running all over town to multiple teachers or worse, you're counting on that new select coach to actually develop your child.
Speaker AYou need to check out MDNI Academy today.
Speaker AGo to mdaiacademy.com and contact Coach Rick to learn how you can get all the baseball instruction you need from someone who cares about your favorite player as much as you do at MDNI Academy.
Speaker AAll right, so we're gonna wrap up today with just a little bit of postseason fun.
Speaker AGot a little, got a little who's the hero today?
Speaker AAnd we're gonna, we're gonna see what you guys know about postseason stuff.
Speaker DWe gotta put another trivia whooping on George here.
Speaker CNo, I was in.
Speaker CThat was.
Speaker ASee if George can catch him.
Speaker ANow, a lot of this, A lot of this is stuff that, that happened when either George was young and watching baseball or George was playing baseball.
Speaker ASo a lot of this is before us.
Speaker DDo we get a head start?
Speaker CNo.
Speaker DCan I get like a two point head?
Speaker AGeorge might have a, have a little bit of an advantage here.
Speaker CI give you zero to start.
Speaker AAll right, all right, all right.
Speaker ASo we're going to talk about postseason.
Speaker AI've just picked some, several fun Facts.
Speaker AAnd we're going to see what everybody knows.
Speaker ASo number one, who threw the only.
Speaker AAnd there's only been one.
Speaker AWho threw the only World Series game?
Speaker AHe did.
Speaker BDon Larson.
Speaker BEverybody knew that one.
Speaker ADon Larson with the Yankees, 1956.
Speaker AAgainst whom?
Speaker CDodgers.
Speaker AOkay, so I warmed you up.
Speaker AEasy.
Speaker COh, I thought that was.
Speaker BI know everybody.
Speaker AThat was a little sprint pole to pole there, buddy.
Speaker DOkay, now are we doing a who answers first?
Speaker ANo, I think you have to.
Speaker AOtherwise George is just going to like spontaneously combust over there.
Speaker CAll right, I want some duct tape for.
Speaker DDo you want a Red Bull first?
Speaker CYeah, give me a Red Bull.
Speaker AAll right, here we go.
Speaker AHow many postseason no hitters have been thrown in Major league baseball history?
Speaker BOne.
Speaker BYeah, I'll go with one.
Speaker AThree.
Speaker DOh, nobody.
Speaker AOne was Don Larson.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIn 1956. Who were the other two?
Speaker BOh, what's the.
Speaker BWas it another.
Speaker COkay, it would say Philly.
Speaker AThey're during Ethan's lifetime.
Speaker AOh, actually they're during when you would have been watching baseball and knowing what's going on.
Speaker BThat's a good one.
Speaker CI don't keep stats of pictures.
Speaker A2010.
Speaker D2010.
Speaker CWas it Reds involved?
Speaker BOh no, he's a diamondback.
Speaker ANLDS 2000.
Speaker DWas it Madison?
Speaker DBoom Gardner?
Speaker ANope.
Speaker BNah, he's.
Speaker AYou call you, you call out the Diamondback all the time.
Speaker BDiamondback?
Speaker CA Diamondback.
Speaker CWho?
Speaker BArizona Diamondback.
Speaker ARoy Halliday.
Speaker AYeah, that's.
Speaker AOh yeah, he's one of Ethan's favorites.
Speaker CThat's why the Blue Jays, Toronto.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker AAnd then the last One was not one person, but the Houston Astros combined for 1 in 20, 22 in the World Series.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AThere have been 16 World Series walk off home runs in major league history, but only two have ended the entire series.
Speaker AWho hit them?
Speaker CCarter?
Speaker ANope.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AWhich Carter?
Speaker CPresident Carter.
Speaker AJoe.
Speaker AJoe Carter.
Speaker CNo, I said Carter.
Speaker CYou didn't say name is Joe Carter.
Speaker AIn 1993, Blue Jays versus Phillies and.
Speaker AAnd then probably the.
Speaker AThe best known walk off of all time.
Speaker BOh, I know.
Speaker BIt was in the 50s.
Speaker BBobby.
Speaker BBobby.
Speaker ANope, it wasn't Bobby Thompson.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker AThat wasn't the World Series.
Speaker COh, oh, that.
Speaker BThat was a playoffs.
Speaker AMy fault ended the World Series.
Speaker CIt had to be second basin Pittsburgh Pirates.
Speaker BOh yes, Bill.
Speaker CMah.
Speaker BI'm giving that to Rick.
Speaker AYes, Bill.
Speaker AMask against the Yankees.
Speaker A60s against the Yankees.
Speaker AThere you go.
Speaker CThe Jankies.
Speaker ALook at you.
Speaker AAll right, how many straight steals?
Speaker AAnd we're talking straight steals now.
Speaker AHow many straight steals have there been in the world in World Series games in major league history?
Speaker CI wasn't one of them.
Speaker CSo I don't know.
Speaker AI'm gonna get straight.
Speaker ALet me.
Speaker ALet me ask.
Speaker ALet me ask it.
Speaker BThis would be.
Speaker ALet me ask it this way.
Speaker ALet me ask it this way.
Speaker AThere have been five.
Speaker AThere have been five straight steals of home.
Speaker AOh, five guys who had a straight steal of home.
Speaker BSo one has got to be Jackie Robinson.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ACan you name the Jackie Robinson?
Speaker AIs one 1955.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CSeries.
Speaker BWillie McGee.
Speaker AWillie McGee.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BColeman.
Speaker DNo, I mean Ricky Henderson.
Speaker DAt least one of them.
Speaker BNah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ARicky Anderson didn't show up on this list at all.
Speaker CL. Brock.
Speaker CNope.
Speaker AOne guy did it twice, but that was in 20.
Speaker BOh, was it R K?
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ALet me give you some years.
Speaker AOkay, These are all old.
Speaker BThat's.
Speaker AThese are old.
Speaker BYou guys are.
Speaker BOh, was it Ty Cob?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker ATy Cobb did it in 1909.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker COh, yeah, I remember that.
Speaker C1909, man.
Speaker BI seen that.
Speaker AIt's a Fuzzy George was.
Speaker ABoy.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd then these other guys, I had never even heard of them.
Speaker ASo that's.
Speaker ASo one guy did it twice in 1921 and 1928.
Speaker AHis name was Bob Musil.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker AAnd I never heard.
Speaker CI had never heard, but not.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AAnd then one was a Monty Irvin in 19.
Speaker BCleveland could be Monty Irving.
Speaker AI don't remember.
Speaker COr dog.
Speaker COr giants.
Speaker BGiants.
Speaker AAnd then what was a guy named Mike McNally in 1921?
Speaker A1.
Speaker ASo those are the guys who head straight now.
Speaker BLe off.
Speaker BDad.
Speaker AI told you.
Speaker AI gave you this.
Speaker AI gave you the pull to pole sprint early on.
Speaker AMan, these things, this is.
Speaker AThere's some intense stuff.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAll right, here's an easy.
Speaker CI should have two.
Speaker CThey got a half from Ethan.
Speaker CHere's.
Speaker AHere's an easy one.
Speaker AWhat team has scored the most postseason runs?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AMajor league.
Speaker CWhy'd you hesitate?
Speaker CWhat team?
Speaker CWhat team?
Speaker AOkay, what manager has won the most postseason wins in major league history?
Speaker BJoe Tory.
Speaker AYou got it.
Speaker CYankees.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHe has 84 wins in the postseason.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker AMan, that's pretty good.
Speaker AAll right, we only got about three more here.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker AOkay, what team has lost the most postseason games in major league?
Speaker BBuffalo Bill.
Speaker DOh.
Speaker AOh.
Speaker CKansas City Royals.
Speaker BNope.
Speaker DIs it also the Yankees?
Speaker AIt is also.
Speaker COh, my God.
Speaker AThey have scored the most runs, they have won the most games, and they have lost the most because they played the most.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker AThey lost 184 games in the postseason.
Speaker DTerrible.
Speaker AOkay, here we go.
Speaker AFour players are tied for the most World Series MVP awards.
Speaker CReg Jackson.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThat's when I. Reg Jackson's one of them.
Speaker ABut Let me, let me, let me.
Speaker ASo four players are tied for the most MVP awards.
Speaker AOkay, so they all have the same.
Speaker AWhat is that number, first of all?
Speaker BOh, got to be 7, 8, 3.
Speaker AProbably each one of them got the MVP.
Speaker AHow many times?
Speaker ALike, what are they tied at?
Speaker AOh, going with three.
Speaker DI'm going to go with three.
Speaker BYeah, that's what.
Speaker CI'll go with three.
Speaker CThree.
Speaker CYeah, it's two.
Speaker AIt's two.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ACan you name them?
Speaker AOne is Reggie Jackson.
Speaker BReggie Jackson.
Speaker AThere's three more.
Speaker BMickey Mantle.
Speaker AThese are.
Speaker AThese are.
Speaker AYeah, these are primary guys.
Speaker DCorey Seeger.
Speaker ACorey Seeger is the second.
Speaker BOh, yeah, that's right.
Speaker BWith the Dodgers and with Texas.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker DYeah, he's a man.
Speaker ASo Reggie Jackson, Corey Seeger.
Speaker AThere's two more.
Speaker AAnd these guys, major legends.
Speaker CBabe Ruth.
Speaker AOkay, I'll give you there.
Speaker CLou Gehrig.
Speaker BI was about to say Lou Gehrig.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker BWhich.
Speaker BMariano?
Speaker ANo, these are.
Speaker AThese are classic ERA guys.
Speaker AThese are guys who played just before George or during George.
Speaker DOh, wouldn't be Kurt?
Speaker DJoe Morgan.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker COh, no, that was.
Speaker AThey're both pitchers.
Speaker DOh, Nolan.
Speaker BNo, no, no, no, no.
Speaker ASandy Koufax is 13 on Jim Palmer.
Speaker AIt's not Jim Palmer.
Speaker ANot Jim.
Speaker BIt's a pitcher picture.
Speaker BPitcher.
Speaker CIs he ambidextrous?
Speaker AHe was a Cardinal.
Speaker CBob gets him.
Speaker AHe was.
Speaker CBob knocked you guys out.
Speaker CMama gonna knock you out.
Speaker BGood job.
Speaker AAll right, so this one, what pitcher pitched three times and threw two shutouts in one World Series?
Speaker CDanny McLean.
Speaker ANo, he pitched three games in the.
Speaker AIn the series.
Speaker ATwo of them were.
Speaker AWere shutouts.
Speaker CThought he said shut up.
Speaker BI want to say Sandy Koufax.
Speaker AYou would be right if you did.
Speaker CBut he didn't say it.
Speaker CHe didn't say it.
Speaker AI don't remember which game it was.
Speaker AI don't remember which year it was.
Speaker AI didn't write it down.
Speaker AIt was in the 660s.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CMinnesota.
Speaker AHe pitched game two, game five and game seven.
Speaker AAnd game five and seven were shutouts.
Speaker CIs that the same.
Speaker BYou know what college he went to?
Speaker CBecause he's Jewish.
Speaker DYou see?
Speaker BYes, you see.
Speaker CYou know what position he played?
Speaker CPicture first base.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIt was a first baseman at all.
Speaker BYou see?
Speaker AInteresting.
Speaker BYeah, it was.
Speaker AAll right.
Speaker AThe last one who threw eight.
Speaker AEight.
Speaker ACan you believe it?
Speaker ATwo thirds complete games, including three in one World Series.
Speaker ASo he threw eight complete World Series games, including three in one series in 1968.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker A81 total innings.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AIn multiple World Series.
Speaker ABob Gibson.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CThe Bob.
Speaker CThe Bob.
Speaker CThe Bob.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker AThat single steps Blew my mind.
Speaker BThat's crazy.
Speaker AThe man, through eight complete World Series.
Speaker CGames, just nobody hit when he pitched.
Speaker CThat's, that's the excuse.
Speaker ABut I mean, like, what is it?
Speaker AWere they just.
Speaker AWere they intimidated?
Speaker ACould they not see it?
Speaker CWhat was it?
Speaker CThey were intimidated.
Speaker CSo they didn't see it.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker CCuz they.
Speaker CHe would come inside on you.
Speaker BYeah, but I wonder what his fastball was back then.
Speaker CI just know it.
Speaker CThe location.
Speaker CHe would put one underneath your chin, they'll slide away.
Speaker CBecause when we played the Astros, they had Don Wilson, Larry Durker, the guys who threw hard, and Willie Mason.
Speaker CThose guys said, you can think out there, but don't go out there.
Speaker CAnd so that means that don't look out there because the next pitch is going to be up and in.
Speaker CSo we had a guy.
Speaker CAh, we're not going to.
Speaker CHe got that defied what they said.
Speaker CSo he looked out there and the guy hit him right in the forehead.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker CSo he looked like a unicorn.
Speaker DThat's great.
Speaker DHe never, Bob Gibson never threw less than eight innings in a World Series appearance.
Speaker BThat is crazy.
Speaker DIt goes 8, 10, 9, 9, 9, 9.
Speaker AIsn't that crazy?
Speaker CHe was the starter and relief had.
Speaker DA record of 7, 7 and 2 with an ERA of 1.89.
Speaker DWith that guy, 92 strikeouts.
Speaker AI mean, you talk about.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker DThat's a good se.
Speaker DThat's a good season for a reliever just in the World Series.
Speaker CSo that's.
Speaker CI would like to go back and.
Speaker BFind out, like, okay, what was your workout regimen for.
Speaker BFor keeping your arms sound like that.
Speaker BYou know, that's the key.
Speaker CWell, seriously, go back with those guys.
Speaker CYes, of course.
Speaker CGibson, all those guys who threw in those days, how did they recover?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BBecause I always say that if you go back to the past, it could help us with our, with the future.
Speaker CThey don't want to rely on the past.
Speaker BThat's the sad part about it.
Speaker CThey think they know it.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou take a guy like Bob Gibson, like the, the other thing I'm wondering is part of his dominance, much like Nolan Ryan, you know that you can go out there and face him in the first inning and you can go out there and face him in the seventh inning or the eighth inning and he's still going to be tough.
Speaker ALike you're not worried about.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AIf we get him to the seventh or eighth, he's going to start coming apart and then we can hit him.
Speaker ANo, like he was still dominant.
Speaker CYou got to get it.
Speaker CIf you're going to get him, you got to get him early.
Speaker DYeah, well, that's, and that's the thing.
Speaker DThe, the, the new, the new thought process is don't let him turn the lineup over because guys have seen you.
Speaker DOkay, I get that, that, that makes logical sense, but then apply that to, to the past.
Speaker DIt didn't matter.
Speaker DSo regardless of your, what you think is a better option to let them pitch or to pull them early, regardless of what you think is better, those guys were throwing all those innings in spite of the fact that they were facing the same guys three and four times in a game.
Speaker DThat's impressive.
Speaker CBut another minimum plus is that you had guys who were coaching that had played the game.
Speaker CSo now you, you bring in a pitching coach.
Speaker CThe best pitching coach is the guy who, who was catching.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CBecause he's on both sides been a batter, been a catcher.
Speaker CSo I saw the other day they were throwing McLean fastballs up and away.
Speaker CTwo fastballs up and away.
Speaker CHe didn't even touch it.
Speaker CThen guess what?
Speaker CHe threw him a slide, a breaking ball inside, got a base hit down left field line.
Speaker CSo they're trying to get too smart.
Speaker CJust go with what you see that he can't do.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, that's.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AAs I was looking through these, these stats, I was just blown away.
Speaker CNo, I didn't.
Speaker AHow many times Bob Gibson's name comes up for what's crazy and just how unbelievably dominant he was, you know, for as, for as amazing a career as Nolan Ryan had.
Speaker AWhen you start looking at World Series stats, he doesn't show up very often because he wasn't on a lot of World Series teams.
Speaker AHe was a guy out there, you know, holding it down, getting it done by on his own.
Speaker BIt's like Mario Soto.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, very much.
Speaker AYeah, very much like that.
Speaker ASo, you know, but Bob Gibson had the fortune to be on world class caliber teams with those, those Cardinals teams.
Speaker AAnd yet.
Speaker ASo he made the most of every opportunity he had.
Speaker AAnd my God, he shows up all the time.
Speaker CI think they were in 11.
Speaker CThey won 11.
Speaker ACould be.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker CYeah, I was talking to.
Speaker CWhen the Cardinals were in, how many.
Speaker BDid you guys win?
Speaker C7.
Speaker CSaid nope.
Speaker C111.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker CSo, I mean, but we look at what the Yankees have done, then the Cardinals have done.
Speaker AWell, you know, the Yankees are just, my gosh.
Speaker BBut the Dodgers.
Speaker CBut with the, with Steinbrenner and probably guys before then, is that their mindset?
Speaker CWe're going to win.
Speaker CWe got to get whatever players we need.
Speaker CWe're going to win.
Speaker CYes, we'll buy a team.
Speaker BAnd they still have that mindset too.
Speaker AAnd that's the other thing I'm thinking.
Speaker CBut they don't know how to go out and get the players.
Speaker CNow they're, you have guys on the Yankees.
Speaker CThey're not, they don't, they're not intimidating like before.
Speaker AWell, I'm thinking like, you know, okay, so let's go back to young, young George Foster who in LA growing up as a kid and your hometown team has Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax and.
Speaker CYou know, I mean Mari Wells and more.
Speaker CBut I knew their, their mindset was good pitching, good defense instead in speed.
Speaker CSo Mario Wheels, get on base.
Speaker CJunior Gilliam get on base, score one or two runs, the game's over.
Speaker AI'm just so envious because I never, you know, I wasn't around.
Speaker AI never got to see Sandy Koufax throw.
Speaker AAnd that I can imagine.
Speaker AIt was just amazing to have him pitch for your home team.
Speaker CLike, I mean, oh, but the mechanics, he was, he was so fine tuned.
Speaker CJust like with Tom Seaver.
Speaker CYou know you can, you can repeat that mechanic over and over again.
Speaker CAnd then dries, I mean in Koufax.
Speaker COh, I don't have a curveball today.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CI rely on the fastball.
Speaker CYeah, just, yeah, just dominating.
Speaker CThen you have Drysdale coming behind you and he's.
Speaker CIf you're right handed hitter, that ball is going to tail in sometime on purpose.
Speaker CThen you throw that slider away like hope.
Speaker CI always hope that if I, when I, if I strike out, it'll be the third out.
Speaker CThis is back to that dugout level.
Speaker ASwing, let it travel, wait for your pitch, be aggressive out there.
Speaker AIt's no wonder young players get confused at the plate.
Speaker AWhat if your son or daughter could learn not only how to hit the ball but also where to hit it, when to hit it there and why.
Speaker AGeorge Foster has played baseball at the very highest levels.
Speaker AHe was the National League MVP when he hit 52 home runs and 149 RBIs in a single season.
Speaker AHe led the major leagues in home runs twice and RBIs three times.
Speaker AHe was a five time All Star, a Silver Slugger and he helped the Reds win back to back World series.
Speaker ADuring his 15 year career, George developed a unique approach to hitting that made him one of the greatest hitters of all time.
Speaker AAnd now your favorite player can learn it too.
Speaker AThat's right.
Speaker ABaseball legend George Foster is currently accepting new students.
Speaker ALearn the psychology of hitting, situational hitting, hitting for power bunting and more.
Speaker AEvery team needs players who can hit and George explains the game in a way that's easy to understand and exciting to learn.
Speaker ASo check out georgefosterbaseball.com to learn how you can apply for private lessons with a member of the Cincinnati Reds.
Speaker AHall of Fame.
Speaker ASpots are limited and the roster will fill up fast, so don't wait.
Speaker AApply at George Foster baseball.com well, thanks for joining us for our little romp through the pro season here.
Speaker AHopefully, hopefully we've shared some things you found interesting and more than anything, I just appreciate you being here.
Speaker AI know the guys do too, week after week and hopefully you can maybe leave us a, leave us a comment, leave us a four star review, five, whatever it is, five stars, whatever.
Speaker AThe stars are now five stars and mainly tell somebody, you know, share it with somebody else.
Speaker AAnd we're trying to get the word out about the podcast and reach as many people as possible.
Speaker ASo anything you can do to help, we appreciate it.
Speaker AAgain, there are websites for everybody.
Speaker AThere's mdniacademy.com georgefosterbaseball.com glovehound.com you can find us on all of those.
Speaker AYou can also find the podcast on completegame podcast.com and every place that you can listen to podcasts.
Speaker AApple and Spotify and Amazon and all those places.
Speaker ASo hopefully you'll, you'll enjoy that and you'll keep coming back and we'll see you next week for another discussion on the Complete Game Podcast.
Speaker BYeah, right.
Speaker AWe hope you've enjoyed the Complete Game Podcast, the show that's all about baseball.
Speaker ANew episodes drop each week, so be sure to subscribe so you don't miss a thing.
Speaker AIf you'd like to support the podcast, consider leaving us a five star rating or better yet, drop us a comment or a question.
Speaker ALet us know what you think.
Speaker AThe Complete Game Podcast is produced and distributed by 2Creative Digital Marketers.
Speaker ACheck us out at 2CreativeDigital.com on behalf of Ethan, Coach Rick and the Silver Slugger George Foster.
Speaker AI'm Greg Dungan saying have a great week and we'll see you real soon.