DIAMOND DYNAMICS SOFTBALL LLC

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  • Connect with Us
  • Summer Showcase
    • Tournament Rules
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    • 2026 >
      • Jenna Bookman (RHP/COR)
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    • 2027 >
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      • Libby Barbay (INF/UTL)
      • Madison Belliotti (C/UTL)
      • Joanna Byrne (C/OF/MIF)
      • Abby D'Angelo (1B/OF)
      • Taylor DeSantis (MIF/OF)
      • Madison Ferro (MIF/OF)
      • Olivia Gee (RHP/UTL)
      • Renee Henning (C/3B)
      • Andrea Hodgkinson (OF)
      • Olivia Lange (RHP/OF)
      • Addison Lewis (C/OF/2B)
      • Emma Lindstrom (C/OF)
      • McKenzie McCann (OF/1B)
      • Emma Mullins (RHP/OF)
      • Lauren O'Brien (1B/3B)
      • Allie Policare (RHP/3B)
      • Reyes Rodriguez (RHP/3B/UTL)
      • Lauren Signor (MIF/RHP/OF)
      • Scarlett Sloma (RHP/OF)
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Sun, Softball, and Stress 

11/30/2016

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On Monday morning I flew back to PA from a great last minute Thanksgiving with loved ones on the gulf coast beaches in Florida. (Yes, it was sunny and wonderful, be jealous!) After a crazy few months it was amazing to leave my phone, my computer, my school work, and yes even softball at home and truly enjoy some time relaxing with my family. Actually that’s a lie, I did pitch on the beach with my 15-year-old sister, who happens to actually be a catcher. (Like Megan, the sister catching at Adelphi University…the family could only handle one pitcher!) BUT for twenty minutes there was no instruction, no pressure, and no expectations…it was purely fun and relaxing.
 
The moral to the story - everyone needs a break. From school, from softball, from everyday life and the stress that unfortunately so often comes with it. As adults, we need mental health days and time off around the holidays. THE SAME GOES FOR YOUR PLAYERS TOO. Part of the success of any athlete is being able to have time to miss the sport. By practicing and playing year round the thrill of the game begins to fade for many young athletes and it leads to the “burn out” factor occurring in younger and younger athletes. The days of the three sport athlete are quickly fading as sport specialization becomes the new thing. Growing up I was a three sport athlete (softball, basketball, and volleyball) until high school started, and after that I still ran indoor track and played softball. The expectations put on athletes in their travel ball programs makes it harder and harder for them to not only play other sports, but also to get a break and make memories outside of softball.
 
The following is a portion of the preseason workout packet that I put together for my collegiate pitchers this year. We start official preseason on January 11th and our season opener is February 4th. Even with our first games being so soon, I still think it will benefit us more as a staff to take the week off and give the girls time to enjoy being home with their friends and family.
 
 
12/19 - 12/25
“There is virtue in work, and there is virtue in rest. Use both and overlook neither.”
- Alan Cohen
 
OFF! Put your glove in the closet and enjoy time with your family. Give your body a break, but also mentally take a break, refocus next week and get to work!

 
 
So here is my plea - yes this is for you travel ball coaches! Give you players time off. Tell them to throw their gloves in the closet and leave it there for a few weeks. Give them time to enjoy Christmas and New Year’s with their friends and family just like you want to. 2 or 3 weeks of indoor practice will not make or break your season this year. In January when you start practicing again I can almost guarantee that your players will be excited and WANT to put in the work. Time away can be ten times more beneficial than practices with players going through the motions because they are burnt out and would rather be doing holiday activities. Time away from softball gives everyone involved - players, parents, and coaches - time to take care of themselves and then come back ready to dive into preseason head first. After spending a week relaxing with my family, I accomplished more in the past few days that I’ve been back than I ever imagined. I have new energy and excitement to get back to work. Give your girls the opportunity to have the same feeling about the sport they love! 
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Today we should have won, but we didn't. 

11/9/2016

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Today we should have won, but we didn’t. It may have come down to one play, or maybe we just had a really bad game or day overall, but we should have won - we were the better team. On paper, everything said we would win…we were stronger, faster, more athletic - just better softball players than they were. We should have won.
 
This feeling is one of the worst, knowing that you should have won and walking home empty handed instead. BUT, I can almost guarantee that there are days that you and your team have walked away with a win against a stronger, faster, more athletic and just overall better team than yours. This is the beauty of softball - it is anyone’s game on any given day. It is nothing like football or lacrosse, where players go up one on one to try to out run, out tackle, or out score each other. Softball is not only about how well you gel as a team, but also how well you execute. Sometimes, a missed steal sign or a wild pitch can decide a game. Those who execute at the right time win. It’s that simple. Average teams beat great teams when they fail to execute and do the little things. Throughout your career you will be on both sides of this scenario, walking away from some games wondering how in the world you just lost and others wondering who had the four leaf clover in their cleat. Success is seen as earning a hit 3 out of 10 at bats. In a game where you can fail 7 times out of 10 and are still considered successful, you are guaranteed to have bad days. Sometimes you’ll hit the most perfect line drive right at the center fielder, and then next at bat you’ll hit a ridiculous pop fly that ends up in no man’s land behind first base for a single. Sometimes it really is about timing and luck.

 
It was 2007. We were in North Carolina playing for an NSA Eastern National Title with 128 teams. With 8 teams left we were knocked into the loser’s bracket and fought back to the championship game, needing to win two games to win it all against an undefeated Alabama team. Going into the 7th inning of game one we were behind 1-0. A slap up the middle, a bunt, and a perfectly placed single tied the game. We then went into extra innings to win the first game, ultimately winning the tournament in game two. In the span of one half inning, the entire course of the game had changed due to a perfectly timed execution. It was to no fault of the other team. They made the out to get the player who had bunted, and they fielded both the slap and the single in the outfield cleanly. We executed, and on that day - things went our way.

 
​It was 2010. We were in Maryland playing for the ASA Eastern National Title with 85 teams. In the 5th inning we were tied with a team from South Carolina. I gave up a single to left field with runners on first and second. Our left fielder decided to dive for the ball instead of getting in front of it, and the ball ended up rolling to the fence. We ended up losing the game by one run. That play decided our fate and sent us home in 5th place that year.

 
​In softball, it is anyone’s game on any given day. Some days we walk away winning when we probably shouldn’t have, and others we walk away losing when we did everything right. Yet, day after day we still find ourselves out on the field working towards perfection.
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