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How to Keep Statistics from Being Your Main Focus

By Nate Barnett
Jul 4, 2009
Statistically speaking, less than 1% of the entire baseball athlete population who learn how to play baseball will ever get to experience playing a professional baseball game. Thats a shocking stat, and one that at first glance is not necessarily encouraging for those who have a goal of becoming a Big League athlete one day.

Im not sharing these statistics with you to demoralize you in any way. Instead, all highly successful athletes and individuals rarely look at statistics as a guide to their future success and future aspirations. Great athletes tend to see these types of statistics as a huge inspiration to do what others have never tried, or have given up pursuing. This was the case for me as I progressed through college and fulfilled my dream of playing professional baseball. Let me share with you a brief tip for how to use this mindset as you develop yourself as a good pitcher, hitter, and overall athlete.

If youve spent any amount of time playing the great game of baseball, did you ever think about your percent chance of hitting a home run while you were up at bat? Of course you didnt. The reason is that you didnt have time, or brain space to think about a statistical calculation while you were trying to crush the ball. This principle is how great athletes view their career. They are too busy working on improving to ever stop and think about what the chances are that they ever get to play professionally. Little Leaguers use this same strategy unknowingly. To these young athletes everything is a learning experience, baseball is fresh, and failure and negative stats havent had time to beat their mentality into the dirt.

The question we have to answer is how do we as competitive athletes and coaches keep stats from paralyzing our optimism and work habit? Its a real and evident challenge for athletes of all kinds. Thousands of baseball players quit every year because they are not having the success they have perceived they should be experiencing. They have let past performances beat them up and have projected those failures on to their future years in the sport. Consequently, instead of battling through the frustration, they quit and find something else to do.

If you will never let your mind go down that road, but keep persisting, you will find that you will achieve more than you ever thought you would. This thinking will undoubtedly transform your vision as you learn how to play baseball and develop your goals.
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