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Nine
Principles of Baseball and Life
by Raymond Angelo Belliotti |
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Baseball is
about parents taking their children to local fields and teaching them
the sport. Baseball is about the bonding of parents and children in
the context of 150 years of history and the excitement of the infinite
possibilities of summer. Baseball is about preseason practices, with
everyone playing a variety of positions, no one keeping score,
everyone energized, yelling, and engaged. Baseball is passing down an
American legacy, reinforcing family love, teaching values and a way of
life, sharing joy and triumph, sorrow and defeat. Baseball can
illustrate and enhance the meaning in our lives. Baseball is only a
distant cousin to organized games, all star tournaments, or names
appearing in the local sports pages.
My Sicilian parents taught me values about life that are
applicable to playing baseball. My father made it clear: if I acted
inappropriately on a baseball field, no umpire, no coach, no league
official would have to intervene. He would run onto the field himself
and physically drag me off. He was not in attendance to be embarrassed
by a son who had not learned proper values. The most important rule:
approach any task with great enthusiasm, a positive attitude, and with
appreciation for the opportunity to participate. My 9 principles of
baseball are more fundamentally 9 principles of living a rewarding
life.
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1. NO EXCUSES. |
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Do not blame teammates, umpires, coaches, fans, or the position of the
moon for your performance. Take responsibility for what happens on the
field. Stand up, make no excuses, refuse the excuses that others might
offer you. Excuses get in the way of learning because mistakes are
denied. Be accountable. Remember you are not expected to be a perfect
performer. No one is. Baseball is not an easy game to play.
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2. PLAY WITH HONOR. |
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Always hustle, run out every ground ball and pop up, encourage your
teammates, especially after an error, bad pitch, or a strike out,
carry yourself with pride and dignity. Do not in frustration throw
equipment. Do not ridicule another team or an opposing
player’s name, physical appearance, skill. Do not taunt. Do not distract
an opposing player with low-level antics. Be positive with teammates. Never
ridicule or criticize your teammates. They need your encouragement the
most immediately after they have made a mistake. Show your teammates,
your opponents, the entire world the values you hold dear by how you
play.
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3. BE RELENTLESS.
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Never Yield. Never
Yield. Regardless of what the scoreboard says, you are never defeated
unless you give up, unless you go belly up. No opponent can make you
do this. Giving up is something you do. Regardless of what the
scoreboard says, no opponent can extinguish the flame in your heart or
crush the intensity of your will without your consent. Never
surrender.
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4. SLAY YOUR OWN
DEMONS, THEN SLAY DRAGONS. |
Ignore those things outside your control: the judgments of umpires,
the conduct and ability of other teams, the weather, your amount of
playing time, the final score (this is a tough one). Do not show
frustration or disappointment. Do not allow your opponents to gain joy
from your inability to cope with self-pity. Do not throw equipment or
whine in anger or slump your shoulders. Such behavior impresses no
one. Maintain your poise. Learn, prepare, and focus on the next event.
We cannot change the past. Instead, we should focus on the next action
with determination, joy, and resolve.
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5. TAKE RESPONSIBILITY
FOR THOSE THINGS UNDER YOUR
CONTROL. |
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Your effort, your attitude, your commitment, and your approach to the game are under your
control. Be enthusiastic, play with great effort, conduct yourself
appropriately, meet this opportunity with great joy. Listen to your coaches. Be alert,
play smartly, know the signs. You are always accountable. How you react to
situations and circumstances reveals the person you are and the person
you might become.
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6. PLAY THE GAME ONE PITCH AT A TIME. |
Focus on the current pitch. If you are a pitcher, what are you
throwing now and where? If you are a fielder, what are you going to do
if the ball is hit to you? If you are a base-runner, what are you
going to do on a fly ball, line drive, ground ball, to the right side,
to the left side? If you are a batter, what are you trying to
accomplish on this pitch? If you are on the bench, how are you helping your team be
successful?
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7. FOCUS ON BEHAVIOR, NOT OUTCOMES. |
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The results of your performance are not fully under your control. The
other team may be very good, or very bad. The bounces may go your way,
or not. But your behavior and approach are under your control. At the
end of the game, you, perhaps only, know whether you gave 100%,
whether you did all you could to help your team. Those players who did
are winners, those players who did not are losers,
regardless of what the scoreboard says. Winners take care of the
things within their control, enjoy their participation, and are
justifiable proud of their effort.
Losers make excuses, lose their poise readily, wallow in self-pity, and surrender at the
slightest sign of adversity.
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8. THE BEST PLAYERS
ARE THE BEST LEARNERS. |
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Players who are coach-able are always trying to learn more about being
successful ballplayers and people. They listen and apply what their
coaches and teachers suggest.
Are you coach-able? If you are, you are a winner. If you are not, you are a
loser, regardless of what the scoreboard says.
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9. BE A JOYOUS WARRIOR! |
Be enthusiastic, positive, give 100%, understand that relentless
effort in the pursuit of excellence is its own reward. The joyous
warrior exemplifies the slogan “No Retreat & No Surrender.” Win with
humility, lose with dignity. |
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This article was written by Raymond Angelo Belliotti and remains his
property. We appreciate him allowing us to reprint his article here.
Raymond Angelo Belliotti is the Distinguished Teaching Professor in
the Department of Philosophy at the State University of New
York/Fredonia. He can be reached at
belliott@fredonia.edu. |
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