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THE TYPICAL GIRL FAST PITCH SOFTBALL PLAYER
At one time, she looked cute as a button, dressed in pink with ponytails. (Visions of Alice in Wonderland.) She played with dolls, helped mom bake cookies, and has probably earned a few bucks baby-sitting. She has been, and always will be daddy's little girl.
She still has all those little girl attributes. The only difference is now she looks cute dressed in sliders and shorts. If she is wearing ribbons in her hair, they are team colors. She still bakes cookies ... team bake sale. And she has probably earned a few bucks ... at the team car wash. Now she is, and always will be daddy's little first baseman (insert position of choice).
She takes pride in how much dirt she can collect every weekend. Go to dinner on a night that she is not playing and it takes an hour of primping to get ready, and she still feels self-conscious. Go after a game and she'll walk right into a restaurant with a streak of dirt across her forehead, ratted hair, stained shirt and brownish/white socks. Or brown toes with sandals! Let's EAT!
She is ready and willing to play at the drop of a hat! If she can get away with it, she will play on two teams. (In the same day no less) She has a huge wardrobe: plenty of tournament shirts and shorts from all the teams she has played on. Her parents do her school shopping every weekend at the tournament T-shirt booth. When you say, "wear something nice", she thinks it means a tournament shirt without dirt stains.
She needs to get an athletic scholarship. Her parents have spent $100,000 on camps, private instruction, batting cages, gloves, bats, equipment, uniforms, player fees, concession stands, travel and lodging. THEY'RE BROKE!!! She is a fierce competitor, willing to stand in against a fast pitcher at close distance that even pro baseball players would have trouble hitting! And she might be 5'2" and 100 lbs. soaking wet. She might play first or third base at 20 feet from home plate, saying I dare you to bunt ... drive one down my throat!!!
She has more spirit than maybe any other team sport. At least it sounds that way. Softball is the only sport where a girls ability to cheer sometimes effects roster decisions. She can't bunt or hit, she is a liability in the field ... but she cheers constantly! She is playing the game for all the right reasons! SHE LOVES IT! She could hang out at the mall, stay home and watch TV, or spend her summers at the pool. Instead she has a tight schedule with limited free time, hangs out on the practice field with a coach in her face, and spends her summers getting baked on a 95-degree field with no shade. Maybe we should get some of our kids checked for IQ?
She has her priorities in order: Tournaments, League Games, Team Practices, schoolwork, individual practice and batting cage, family, private softball instruction, church, conditioning, softball camps, boys. (Maybe church comes before the batting cage, at least on Sundays.) She is diligent and hardworking. She knows you get out of something, what you put into it. She is not the type of kid to take the easy way out! She is competitive, not willing to give up. She learns many valuable lesson during the course of her softball career, like; You can stay at Holiday INN for $12 bucks a night if you are willing to go 4 to a room or Hotels don't monitor pool usage, and you can go swimming anytime, whether your a registered guest or not and Continental breakfast means: 3 bowls of cereal, bagel, 2 donuts and 4 glasses of OJ.
Unlike the geographically challenged, softball girls know how to get from home to every field in a 25 mile radius.
She has a lot of fun every summer, enough to make her come back next year regardless of all the sacrifices, the money, the occasional bad coach, drinking water that people have put their hands in, etc.
The Typical Girls Fast Pitch Softball Player is first and foremost somebody’s child and will always be daddy's little girl.
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Then I Became a Softball Dad
Then I Became a Softball Dad
I used to have a regular life. (Actually, many of my friends say that sentence should say, "I used to have a life", period.) It doesn't really seem that long ago. Then I became a Softball Dad.
My lawn used to be like a carpet. It was green, mowed, trimmed, fertilized, and watered. Any weeds that dared to show their leaves were pulled out by their roots. Now I have two big bare spots forty feet apart. I like the bare spots. I like them because they are the only places that the weeds and crab grass aren't threatening to take over.
My car used to draw admiring looks and comments. It was clean and waxed and shined and Armor All'd. Now it only draws attention when it wins the "dirtiest car in the parking lot" prize. My friends and I used to spend Monday mornings talking about five-iron shots, three-putts, and titanium shafts. Now I bore them to death with detailed play-by-play descriptions of five or six low-scoring ball games. Somehow, they just don't understand the drama of a 2-0 game.
I used to think anything over $40 was an exorbitant price for a ball bat. Now the contents of my daughter's equipment bag are worth more than everything else in the car together - including clothes, jewelry, watches, and laptop computer.
I used to have a great wife. Still do, Thank God. But that's a tribute to her patience and good humor. We used to sit and talk for hours. We still do - to keep each other awake when we're headed home in the wee hours of Monday morning. We used to wonder what the kids would do when they grew up. Now she wants to know what I'm going to do IF I ever grow up.
My summer casual wardrobe used to be made up of color-coordinated polo shirts, cool cottons in bright colors, and the occasional "aloha" shirt. Now I have a closet full of T-shirts in gray and red. Those that don't have COMETS on the front have a cute saying on the back, like "If You Follow Me Long Enough, You'll End Up at a Ball Field." or "Friends Don't Let Friends Play Slowpitch".
I used to glue myself to the sofa and watch the NCAA basketball tournament and the Masters from opening Ceremony through network sign off. Now, I catch the highlights on Sportscenter.
I used to be one of the tops in my field. Thank goodness, I still am. (You have to keep a good paycheck coming in if you want to support a Tournament Softball habit!)
I used to have sympathy for umpires. I used to think boys were tough. I used to think a double-header was a long day at the ballfield. Now we're just getting warmed up.
We used to spend our summer vacation relaxing on the beach or visiting family. Now we hit the road with 40 of our closest friends.
I used to think the ideal woman had brains and beauty. She still does, but now she better also be quick, courageous, and able to bunt a good rise ball.
I used to look for little restaurants that served seafood fresh off the boat. Now I'm a connoisseur of nachos and smoked sausages.
I used to be concerned that I would fall into the trap of living my life through my daughters. Now I know that I'm privileged to live my life WITH my daughters.
Published with the consent of the author Larry Warrenfeltz
Originally written for the Louisiana High Voltage VOLTLetter in 1997. It was published in FastPitch World in 1998.
Thanks Larry, all of the Dads out there can relate to this piece.
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Summing Up Softball
Summing Up Softball Written by Ruby Reed in 1982
The frozen hamburger is hard as a rock And the big game starts at two; Your girl can't find her softball cleats And the dog ate the leftover stew! No reason for pressure or panic - This problem is really quite tame. Just drive thru the nearest McDonald's And eat on the way to the game!
Yes, softball season is hectic at times But we're certain that it is worthwhile When we see how the girls on all of the teams Improve in their overall style. They're willing to practice daily - They spend lots of their time at the park Batting and pitching and fielding Sometimes from daylight to dark!
Parents have served spaghetti dinners And sold raffle tickets galore, Assisted with fund-raising efforts Then offered to do even more. They've given their time quite freely From coaching, scorekeeping and scouting To just sitting in the bleachers Leading cheers or simply shouting!
These girls know the thrill of victory But they've coped with defeat as well; They've learned the meaning of sportsmanship - In this field they really excel! They could succeed in anything they wanted But softball's the sport that they choose, They deserve our commendation - They are Champions - win or lose!
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A Softball Players Prayer by Hal Skinner
God grant me the wisdom, to tell a strike from a ball, to know where to throw, and never to fall.
Keep me always in the base line, running straight and true, and I'll look for your sign, to stretch one into two.
God give me vision, to see every pitch, so if a player needs help, then I will see which.
Let me always hustle, so I'll be at my best, and take pride in myself, in sports and the rest.
God be my strength, when I throw the ball, when I'm far from home plate, or against a wall.
So I never miss a base, please guide my feet, bring me home safely, so my job is complete.
When I help younger players, let me always give praise, so they'll see you in me, in all of my ways.
God please guide our coach, to be fair and smart, to teach us to be good, let it come from his heart.
Let me take a loss, just as well as a win, to do any less, is surely a sin.
As long as I can play, let me make my parents proud, as proud as I am, when they yell my name out loud.
However my games end, let me always have fun, and if Heaven has All-Stars, I want to be one.
When my games here are over, and my seasons are done, let me play on your team, just like your son.
Amen
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A Coach's Prayer
A COACH'S PRAYER
BUILD ME AN ATHLETE, who will be strong enough to know when she is weak and brave enough to face herself when she is afraid, one who will be proud and unbending in honest defeat and humble and gentle in victory.
BUILD ME AN ATHLETE whose wishbone will not be where her backbone should be, an athlete who will know You and that to know herself is the foundation stone of knowledge. Lead her, I pray, not in the path of ease and comfort, but under the stress and spur of difficulties and challenge. Here let her learn to stand up in the storms; here let her learn compassion for those who fall.
BUILD ME AN ATHLETE whose heart will be clear, whose goal will be high; an athlete who will master herself before she seeks to master others; one who will learn to laugh, yet never forget how to weep; one who will reach into the future yet never forget the past. And after all these things are hers, add, I pray, enough of a sense of humor, never to take herself too seriously. Give her humility, so that she may always remember the simplicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, the meekness of true strength. Then, I, her coach, will dare to whisper, "I have not lived in vain."
adapted from A Father's Prayer by Gen. Douglas MacArthur Reader's Digest, Ma
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*** "Favorite Quotes" ***
"Do not throw in the towel; use it for wiping the sweat off your face." -- Unknown
"How a man plays the game shows something of his character; how he loses shows it all." -- Tribune Camden County, GA
"Sports do not build character. They reveal it." -- Heywood Hale Brown
"All it takes is all you got." -- Marc Davis
"The vision of a champion is someone who is bent over, drenched in sweat, at the point of exhaustion when no one else is watching." -- Anson Dorrance
"A champion is one who gets up...even when he can't." -- Jack Dempsey
"Regardless of what society believes...you don't have to be male to dominate." -- Unknown
"Leadership is action, not position." -- Unknown
"If you believe in yourself and have dedication and pride, you'll be a winner. The price of victory is high, but so are the rewards." -- Paul "Bear" Bryant
"Teamwork is what makes common people capable of uncommon results." -- Pat Summitt
"Let up for a second and that is where you will finish." -- Unknown
"It doesn't take talent to hustle." -- Unknown
"Winners compare their achievements with their goals, while losers compare their achievements with those of other people." -- Nido Qubein
"Every person you meet knows something you don't. Learn from them." -- Jackson Browne
“Coaching is simply getting people to do what they don’t want to do in order to achieve what they want to achieve.” -- Tom Landry
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