Path to College Baseball: How to Get Recruited, Develop, and Thrive at the D3 Level
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About this listen
Do you really know what it takes to go from high school ball to becoming a successful college baseball player? In this episode, a Division III head coach breaks down exactly what he looks for in recruits on and off the field. You’ll hear how winning cultures are built through high standards, simplicity, and relentless player development. The conversation dives into velocity benchmarks, mentality, multi-sport development, and the importance of grades and study habits. If you’re a player, parent, or coach who wants to understand the real path to college baseball, this episode is your roadmap.
TImestamps:
[0:00:02] Inside the Dugout: Introducing the College Head Coach and His Journey
[0:03:04] From D3 Pitcher to Pro Ball: Lessons From Every Level of Baseball
[0:05:32] Experiencing a Winning Culture and Raising Personal Standards
[0:11:04] What College Coaches Really Look For in Recruits
[0:13:37] Pitcher Profile: Velocity, Size, Mechanics, and Strike-Throwing
[0:18:02] Freshman to College-Ready: Four-Year Development Plan for Pitchers
[0:20:11] Why Multi-Position and Multi-Sport Athletes Stand Out
[0:22:16] Inside Dean College: School, Facilities, and Academic Expectations
[0:25:30] Habits, Hours, and Catching Up to College-Level Competition
[0:27:33] Community, Safety, and Life Away From Home for New Players
[0:29:52] Fall Schedule, Player Development, and Leadership Meetings
[0:32:30] Off-Field Standards, Team GPA, and Community Impact
[0:34:40] Career-Defining Stories: Being Ready When Your Name Is Called
[0:37:41] The Power of Simplicity in Coaching and Player Development
[0:40:58] Advice for Coaches Who Want to Move Up to the College Level
Quotes:
- A lot of players think pro ball is the end goal, but I realized I missed impacting 18 to 22-year-olds during their most transformational years.
- Winning programs raise your standards so that being almost perfect in practice becomes your norm.
- Some of the best coaches are the best thieves because they take ideas from great programs and build their own recipe.
- At this level, it is tough to get a finished product, so you have to love developing players, not just recruiting them.
- The more you simplify what you teach, the faster players develop and the more success they have on the field.
Takeaways:
- High-level college baseball is built on high standards in practice, constant competition, and players who embrace raising their own bar.
- Coaches value projectable pitchers who can spin a hard-breaking ball, throw consistent strikes, and are at least around the 80 mph benchmark.
- Multi-position and multi-sport athletes often develop better movement, adaptability, and overall baseball IQ than early specialists.
- Strong grades and study habits not only unlock more scholarship money at private schools but also free up time for extra development on the field.
- The best coaching and development usually come from simple, clear concepts executed at a high level, not from overcomplicated drills or technology.