Lance Lammers

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Lance Lammers

Lance Lammers

@lance_lammers

Baseball Coach at Englewood High School EHS | HHS Alum | TCC Alum | MS Nutrition | 1 John 4:4

Littleton, CO Katılım Mart 2023
250 Takip Edilen55 Takipçiler
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Matt Smethurst
Matt Smethurst@MattSmethurst·
“Heaven isn’t full of good people. Heaven is full of people who understand they’re not good enough.” —@WesleyLHuff to @StevenBartlett Bold. Clear. Kind.
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Lance Lammers
Lance Lammers@lance_lammers·
@Brendougherty And I’d be willing to bet those numbers are even worse for outfielders…
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Brendan Dougherty
Brendan Dougherty@Brendougherty·
Raw numbers on average Counting Early Work/BP Game Days Ground balls per week: MLB- 350-450 Per week Minor League-450-550 Per week College- 250-350 Per week HS- 10-30 Per week If you want to play good infield. You better find a way to get reps!!!
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Deven Morgan
Deven Morgan@devenmorgan·
You've got a choice: A: Teach kids to define themselves by their outcomes (in a game that is literally predicated on failure) B: Teach kids to fall in love with the process, and how to learn from both winning & losing One has significantly more long term value than the other.
Kevin Hodge@K12Hodge

This should be the requirement for every coach at every level of amateur sports… EVERY player on the roster and EVERY player in the program matters. To all my fellow coaches: I challenge you to give them a good experience. THIS is the job at the amateur level.

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Lance Lammers
Lance Lammers@lance_lammers·
This this this
Steve Magness@stevemagness

Norway is once again dominating the winter Olympics. And this is their youth sports program: Participation trophies for all kids. No keeping score until 13. No national travel competitions in youth sports. No posting youth results online. Motto: “Joy of Sport for All.” They let kids be kids. And it works. But…it’s the winter Olympics,right? Recently, they have had tremendous success in summer sports. Karsten Warholm demolished the 400 meter hurdles world record. Kristian Blummenfelt broke the Ironman triathlon record and won Olympic gold. His training partner, Gustav Ivan, won the 2022 Ironman World Championship. Casper Ruud reached world number two in tennis. Viktor Hovland is a top ten golfer in the world. Erling Haaland set the record for the most goals in a season in the Premier League. Beach volleyball champs, a surge of elite runners. By any metric, Norway’s elite athletes are achieving on a global stage. Yet, if we turn to their youth sports, their programs are the opposite of the US. Norway doesn’t allow for official scorekeeping until the age of thirteen. They dissuade early national travel teams in favor of local leagues. You can’t even post the results of youth games online without being fined. And almost sacrilegious in certain American circles, Norway doesn’t allow trophies unless everyone gets one. As Tore Ovrebo, Norway’s director of elite sport, told USA Today writer Dan Wolken, “We think the biggest motivation for the kids to do sports is that they do it with their friends and they have fun while they’re doing it and we want to keep that feeling throughout their whole career.” Their youth sporting model can be summed up with their chosen slogan, “Joy of Sport for All.” But not keeping score, giving out trophies, not being “win at all costs”...that’s anti-American! How can they be competitive? Research backs their approach up. 1. The fire has to come from within If you look at ​research​ on prodigies who eventually become standout adult performers, a deep intrinsic drive is paramount. Researchers found that intrinsically motivated football players were 3.5x more likely to make it to the next level, and athletes in general 2x more likely. The problem is that early success often pulls young people away from this inner drive. Kids start playing soccer (or violin or chess—this isn’t just about sports) because it is exciting and fun. As they improve, they gain accolades and praise from their parents, coaches, and teachers. They start winning trophies or seeing their names in online commentary. Without even realizing it, their intrinsic drive gets replaced by external validation and a need to please and impress others. The quickest way to kill that internal motivation? Hype achievements and be a crazy controlling parent or coach. The best way to create and maintain intrinsic motivation is to let kids dabble, explore, and find something with which their interests and talents align. Then, let them enjoy it without an undue emphasis on success. Praise effort, character, and teamwork, not results. This is easy to talk about but hard to do. Find ways to reward and incentivize the values you want to instill. That means not taking the easy road and talking about who set a new mile best or scored the most points, but instead highlighting who hustled during the fourth quarter, rallied after it seemed like the match was over, or displayed exemplary sportsmanship. 2. Go Broad over Specialization Even if the entire point of youth sports was to create future champions (which it’s not), we’d still adopt something similar to the Norwegian model. An ​analysis​ of over 6,000 athletes explored what separates athletes who reached world class and those who came up short. Those who reached world-class had during their youth: -More multi-sport than specialized practice -Started their primary sport later -Accumulated less overall formal practice -Initially progressed slower than national class peers Those who performed well when young, but didn’t progress: -Started their primary sport earlier -Specialized, engaging in more practice in one sport -Made quicker initial progress Norway doesn’t have 300 plus million people and an NCAA system to funnel talent. They have to develop theirs. And they realize the best way to do that is keep as many people in the system as possible. Why? Because you can’t predict talent development very well! Just go look at the age group record books. It’s easy to fool yourself into thinking early performance equals talent and potential. The kid running a 6-minute mile at 10 looks way better than the one running 6:45. But if the faster one is at track practice 5 days a week and the slower one rolls out of gym class in jeans and runs it off “fitness” from just playing, well I’m betting on the slower one! When we assess performance early on, we’re not measuring talent, we’re looking at training age and opportunity. And we’re crowning winners based on who started grinding first. America gets away with the insane achievement model because we can burn out 9 kids to get 1 survivor. Norway can’t afford to do that. They take the longer, more sustainable model. Rethinking Youth Sports: The whole point of youth sports should be for kids to learn, develop, have fun, and want to come back and play again next season! The best chance of developing a D1 scholarship athlete is essentially to do the exact opposite of what our current youth sports fiasco promotes. Even the poster child for early specialization, Tiger Woods, ​acknowledged​ it’s not a good thing for parents to push their kids too hard: “Don’t force your kids into sports,” he says. “I never was. To this day, my dad has never asked me to go play golf. I ask him. It’s the child’s desire to play that matters, not the parent’s desire to have the child play. Keep it fun.” While youth sports in America aren’t going to adopt the Norwegian model anytime soon, we can rebalance the equation. As I outlined in my book, it’s not getting rid of competitiveness, it’s rebalancing the equation to make sure that crazy mom, dad, or coach don’t extinguish the fire that makes great competitors (and sport fun!). In research on performance orientation and grades in school, a teaching environment that supported and emphasized mastery[PA1] , where students focused on the process of learning and comprehension instead of a comparison to others, was also linked to better grades. But it wasn’t the direct relationship that an outcome orientation had. Instead, in one study on college students, a mastery approach was linked to challenge-seeking, which in turn predicted end-of-the-year grades. In another study, mastery goals predicted higher levels of interest and enjoyment. Mastery works on our approach system without activating avoidance. It frees us up to take on a challenge and pursue our interests without getting bogged down by the pressure or judgment that often comes with an obsession with outcomes. The same findings hold true when looking at sport or the workplace. In a large meta-analysis that analyzed the impact of goal setting in sports, process-orientated goals had a large effect on performance. Outcome goals had little to no effect. These two paths represent a fast versus slow road to success. Both a mastery or outcome focus can lead to better performance, but the latter is akin to taking a shortcut. Obsession over outcomes is the most direct path to improvement, but it comes with some downsides that shift us toward avoidance. The slow path takes a longer, indirect route. It helps improve our performance not by focusing on the results themselves but by supporting the foundation that ultimately leads to better performance. It stokes the fire of enjoyment and interest to sustain our curiosity and work ethic over the long haul. It pushes us toward challenge-seeking so that when we inevitably hit a roadblock, we’ll take it on instead of trying to protect our ego. Both approaches work. One is more sustainable, providing success with less angst. Society has thrown us so far out of balance that we can’t even see the slow route right in front of us. We can either instill a love of sport in our youth, or we can turn sport into a burden where kids are exhausted, stressed, and scared. We’ve seen this go both ways, and the results couldn’t be more different. One leads to happy, healthy, and better young athletes. The other leads to burnout, family tension, mental health challenges, and quitting. As parents, volunteers, coaches, and community members, let’s all do what we can to minimize the latter and champion the former. -Steve

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Lance Lammers retweetledi
Darwin to Jesus
Darwin to Jesus@darwintojesus·
This is should be completely obvious
Darwin to Jesus tweet media
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Greg Berge
Greg Berge@GregBerge·
🚨 I can’t stop thinking about this coaching concept: The Michelangelo Effect It changes how you view leadership. Here’s why: [THREAD] 🧵
Greg Berge tweet media
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Shawn Spradling
Shawn Spradling@Shawn_Spradling·
NEW 2026 WBC PROMO DROPPED AND IT IS SO GOOD. CHILLS.
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Lance Lammers
Lance Lammers@lance_lammers·
@hallofgoodpod And they still don’t think “maybe we could sign the best hitters in free agency, and just out score other teams 12-10”
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MLB Hall of Pretty Good
MLB Hall of Pretty Good@hallofgoodpod·
“Oh they think we’re washed? Let’s join the Rockies and win the batting title in back-to-back seasons just because it would be funny”
MLB Hall of Pretty Good tweet mediaMLB Hall of Pretty Good tweet media
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Albert Breer
Albert Breer@AlbertBreer·
Keep your kids playing multiple sports for as long as possible. Don't listen to club coaches pushing them to specialize. They'll become more well-rounded athletes and people (and far less prone to injury/burnout) if they don't. If you're good enough, colleges will find you.
Greg Olsen@gregolsen88

Dear young athletes- keep this photo saved to your phone and show the next person who says you have to focus on one sport in HS. The amount of kids I’ve heard say “I can’t risk getting hurt” or “my coach won’t let me” drives me crazy. You get one shot to be a HS athlete. @YouthInc

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Patrick Lyons
Patrick Lyons@PatrickDLyons·
As part of the lead up to the 2026 World Baseball Classic, Team USA will play the Colorado Rockies at Salt River Fields on Wednesday, March 4.
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Luke Toms
Luke Toms@InfieldVitamins·
Outfield play - early work/drill package 🧵⬇️
Luke Toms tweet media
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Mike Dro
Mike Dro@MikeDro_·
If the Rays gave Blake Snell and Tyler Glasnow what they wanted, they wouldn’t be Dodgers If the Red Sox gave Mookie what he wanted, he wouldn’t be a Dodger If the Angels gave Ohtani what he wanted, he wouldn’t be a Dodger If the Braves gave Freddie Freeman what he wanted, he wouldn’t be a Dodger Cheap owners created the environment for a super team like the Dodgers to exist. Salary cap doesn’t stop those owners from being cheap.
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Dr. Ismael Gallo DPT, MBA
Dr. Ismael Gallo DPT, MBA@flowsdoc·
My JUCO coach used to say: “There’s a time to coach, and a time to have compassion.” If you’re a parent or coach in youth sports — bookmark this.
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Jackson Thorne
Jackson Thorne@ThornesThrows·
Motor learning is the vital foundation of all player development. Implementing any system relies on common language Here’s a glossary of 25 most essentials motor learning terms and how each relates to baseball 🧵⬇️
Jackson Thorne tweet media
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GodlyVibez Studios
GodlyVibez Studios@GVStudios_TV·
🚨Man shares why Christianity is the only religion mocked.
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