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7 Lessons from the Women's College World Series
Things that may just help win you a
championship!
This year's Women's College World Series was
terrific. There were lots of great plays, tough calls, tense
moments and surprising outcomes. But among all those games and
great plays I saw 7 key things that we can all learn from, and
that really are worth reviewing.
- Great pitchers help, but can't do it all
- Monica Abbott from Tennessee was no doubt one of the
best pitchers this year in college softball and at the
WCWS and yet one player alone couldn't win the whole
thing.
- If you have a good team but no single outstanding
player then this year's tournament proved you can win it
all without the highest profile player, even when that
player is a pitcher!
- When you get your chance, take advantage of it
- At the start of the 2006-2007 school year, Tanya
Mowatt was the #2 pitcher for University of Arizona.
Circumstances changed a few months later and she
suddenly was the main pitcher for Arizona. Instead of
complaining about not being #1, she took advantage of
the chance she was given and made the very most of it –
pitching the University of Arizona to the National
Championship and winning MVP in the process!
- When the batter is FAST, play UP
- Too many times I saw left-handed slappers up to bat
and the infield playing in, but just not in enough.
Remember that just playing "in" isn't enough – you've
got to be close enough "in" to throw out the batter. The
faster the batter the closer IN you've got to play.
- Never, Never, Never Give Up
- Not only did Arizona lose to Tennessee early in the
WCWS to go into the losers bracket, but they lost 0-3 in
the first game of their 2 out of 3 game series against
Tennessee to decide the NCAA Division I National
Champion. In that game Monica Abbott threw her 4th
straight shutout of the series and dominated the Arizona
batters.
- Instead of Arizona giving up against the best
pitcher in the country, they made some adjustments,
realized they weren't out of it yet, they battled and
they came out and won the next 2 games in a row and
captured their 8th National Championship!
- As Winston Churchill said in World War II when the
tiny country of Britain was starring down the then
mighty Germans..."Never Give In, Never, Never, Never
Give In. Never yield to force; never yield to the
apparently overwhelming might of the enemy." I think
that the University of Arizona showed us all what can
happen when we never give up or give in!
- When they show you a pattern, notice it
- The University of Tennessee batters struggled in
their last two games against Arizona and the changeup of
Taryne Mowatt. Even though Mowatt had a strong changeup,
she had an even stronger pattern with it. If you
remember, the more strikes she got on the batter the
more she threw the changeup. In fact, she got a ton of
Tennessee batter's out with changeups on 2 strikes.
- So what's the lesson? Instead of trying to pick the
changeup or figure out how to hit it – work harder to
hit her other pitches BEFORE she's in position to really
throw the changeup. When you face a pitcher like Mowatt
with your team, work to attack her early in the count so
can't get in such a good position to throw her changeup.
- You can't see anything with your eyes closed
- If you were watching the 2nd game of the
championship series between Arizona and Tennessee you
couldn't help but notice that during the latter part of
the game, when things got pretty tense, Tennessee's
Co-Head Coach Ralph Weekly was in the dugout with his
eyes closed. Now Ralph is a very good coach and a very
experienced one having coached 1st base in the 1996
Olympics. But, he was obviously suffering a case of
nerves and couldn't bear to watch.
- Remember that as the coach, your team looks to your
for belief when they have none, for strength with they
feel weak and for confidence when they're scared. If
things seem so bad that you can't bear to watch just
imagine the message that sends to your ballplayers. It's
like the old commercial says, "Never let 'em see you
sweat". So next time coaches you get into a really tough
situation in a game with everything on the line – you're
their fearless leader so if you don't exactly feel that
way at least fake it till you make it.
- Oh, and another thing that will help you take your
mind off how big the situation is – stick to your game.
Keep positioning your defense or calling pitches, or
charting pitches or whatever you've been doing all
season to get your team this far. Remember that as long
as you're busy climbing up the ladder you don't have
time to look down and see how far up you are'
- Being Cool helps you rule!
- Taryne Mowatt is one cool customer. During the 2nd
game of their 3 game playoff with Tennessee, there were
Tennessee runners all over the bases, a big Tennessee
hitter at the plate and not many outs. The score was
tied and it was late in the game. If Tennessee got a hit
in this situation they'd go ahead and it would pretty
much be over for Arizona.
- So, to help calm her pitcher down Arizona catcher
Calista Balko calls time out and walks out to the mound
– what Taryne Mowatt said to her summed up to me why she
was cool enough, and ultimately tough enough to get out
of that situation and go on and win the whole thing.
- As Balko's walking out to the mound Taryne says,
"what's up?" Now that's cool.
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