bill vosik retweetledi
bill vosik
136 posts


One of the hardest lessons I learned after my baseball career ended:
I had tied too much of my identity to the game.
When I played, everything revolved around baseball.
If I had a great game, life felt great.
If I struggled, it felt like everything was wrong.
My emotions followed the same rollercoaster as the game.
And the truth is, when my emotions were on that rollercoaster, it did not just affect me.
It affected the people I loved the most, because they were the ones who had to deal with it.
And when baseball ended, I realized something that caught me completely off guard:
I did not know where to find my sense of purpose.
That is how powerful this game can be.
It pulls you in so deeply that it’s easy to start believing baseball is who you are, not just something you do.
Today when I talk with high school and college players, this is one of the main things I see.
So many of them have tied their identity completely to the game.
One thing I always make sure they hear from me is simple:
I am proud of you.
And I say that after a great game or a tough one.
Because that pride has nothing to do with performance on the field.
It has everything to do with the person they are becoming.
Sometimes to find perspective, we need to take a step back and look at how far we have come.
It is easy to get stuck in the present and focus only on what needs to happen next to advance.
But when we pause and reflect on the work, growth, and experiences that brought us here, it reminds us that our worth is not tied to one moment, one game, or one season.
The truth is, the game eventually ends for all of us.
What matters most has to be bigger than baseball.
Faith.
Family.
Friendships.
Those are the things that carry you long after the final out.
When your identity is rooted there, baseball becomes what it was always meant to be:
A game to love.
A place to compete.
A platform to grow.
Not the definition of your worth.
English
bill vosik retweetledi

So true with the eyes! Tracking the pitched ball from middle infield into the hitting zone vs. looking into the zone from 3b. Plays a big part on your jump and range.
Tony Wuench@twuench
Scott Rolen on playing 3B, converting in MiLB after playing SS in HS, illustrating differences in positioning, approach (always looking in to hitter) & throwing (why missing low is better than missing high). #shegone #Cardinals #Phillies @baseballhall
English
bill vosik retweetledi

𝑼𝒏𝒄𝒐𝒎𝒎𝒊𝒕𝒕𝒆𝒅 𝑺𝒑𝒐𝒕𝒍𝒊𝒈𝒉𝒕 🔦
Hank Vosik | SS/RHP | 2028
▪️ 6.86 60 Time
▪️ 95.4 MPH INF Velo
▪️ 89 MPH INF Velo
▪️ 90 MPH FB Velo
📝: loom.ly/fKoz71c
@Hank_Vosik11 | @PB_Uncommitted
English

@Z_Hinkel @Pacesetters2026 Dang you get around fast! Congrats, big day!
English

The @Pacesetters2026 boys are heading to college next fall. Fun watching them sign their NLI this morning. More coming in the spring!




English
bill vosik retweetledi
bill vosik retweetledi
bill vosik retweetledi

Explosive showing in relief for 2028 RHP Hank Vosik (NE) to close out the championship game.
Lean and athletic 6-foot-0, 175-pounds and moves really well down the mound.
FB: 87-89 T90; life
CB: 70-73
@PrepBaseballNE
@SpectsBaseball
@ShooterHunt
#PBCup25
English
bill vosik retweetledi

‘28 | SS | Hank Vosik (Creighton Prep (NE), @Prospects_NE)
One of the top ‘28’s in NE connects with this one and launches it over the right center wall.
@hank_vosik11 is an all around athlete running a 6.8- 60, and up to 87 on the mound.
Definitely a player to watch heading into his sophomore campaign.
@PrepBaseballKC // @PrepBaseballNE
#FallShowdown25
English
bill vosik retweetledi

4️⃣ 𝐀𝐫𝐦𝐬 𝐓𝐨 𝐊𝐧𝐨𝐰 𝐅𝐫𝐨𝐦 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐂𝐥𝐚𝐬𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝟐𝟎𝟐𝟖
These Nebraska pitchers showed why they’re names you’ll be hearing more of after the Super Sophomore Games.
📲 loom.ly/BxXI4-8

English
bill vosik retweetledi

𝗪𝗘𝗟𝗖𝗢𝗠𝗘 𝗧𝗢 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗦𝗤𝗨𝗔𝗗 🔥
𝙃𝘼𝙉𝙆 𝙑𝙊𝙎𝙄𝙆 ('28, SS/RHP, Creighton Prep) is set to represent #TeamNebraska at the 2025 Super Sophomore Games in KC.
@hank_vosik11 | loom.ly/sGC6QFU

English
bill vosik retweetledi

🏆CHAMPIONS🏆
Congratulations to the 2025 PBKC Slugfest 16u Champions, Omaha Jr. Bluejays!!
#PrepBaseballKC

English

@CoachMongero A lineup of these ballers just wears on the opposing pitcher!
Ability to use the entire field and adjust is tougher to find in the exit velocity era. Good stuff Coach!
English

To me, this is hitting. Look at his approach. Adjustability. Short. Uses the whole field. Can also drive the ball. Hits the ball where it’s pitched. Tough out. We need way more of this in our game. Imagine a line up with 6 or 7 of these dudes! And two power bats (that swing and miss more often) but hit more long balls… now that is baseball.
When I teach hitting to young players, this is more of my focus. Become a great hitter first and the power comes later… when you develop your man body. Then you can situationally hit and hit for power!
@nextlevelbb
@DirtBroUSA
English
bill vosik retweetledi
bill vosik retweetledi
bill vosik retweetledi

There are so many players like Tommy Edman across college baseball that can help a MLB club. They just never get a chance to play at the next level because of aesthetics!! #truth
English

Yes true. Volpe can fly but that's very possibly a DP w Edman back. Sb by Jazz was big.
Nebraska Prospects Baseball Club@Prospects_NE
I would love to see the analytics on why the @Dodgers have the infield in with 1 out in the top of the 10th. The @Yankees should be thanking the LA analytics team for that gift... Should they have been in???
English

Yes it's too bad there are so few competitive games anymore each weekend. Blowouts all over.
Bill Mcdonald@WilliamMcDdad8
@jimweberg @stuOWH Players go where coaches coach. Some of these other schools aren't doing things right . Culture is bad and Noone held accountable.
English













