Fungos & Footnotes

Fungos & Footnotes

Where baseball meets the deeper side of the game. This show is for players, parents, and coaches who care about more than just box scores.

Episodes

  1. Jun 6

    Five Key Moments that Shape a Player & How to Not Get Them Wrong | Episode 11

    Episode 11: 5 Moments That Shape a Player (And How Not to Get Them Wrong) Baseball development isn’t just about mechanics, velocity, exit speed, or batting average. Some of the most important moments in a player’s journey happen away from the field—in the conversations, reactions, and relationships surrounding the game. In this episode of Fungos & Footnotes, Addison Williams and Coach T discuss five critical moments that shape a player’s confidence, identity, and long-term relationship with baseball. The Five Moments That Shape a Player 1. Coaching From the Stands Parents want to help. That’s natural. But constant instruction from the stands often creates confusion rather than confidence. Players already have coaches, teammates, game situations, and their own thoughts competing for attention. Encouragement helps. Additional coaching usually doesn’t. Instead of adding more noise, be the steady voice that reminds your player you’re in their corner. 2. The Car Ride Home The car ride home may be the most influential moment in youth sports. After a tough game, most players are already replaying every mistake in their head. They don’t need another breakdown of what went wrong. Sometimes the best thing a parent can do is simply be present. Support them. Encourage them. Let them process. Remember: your approval should never be tied to their performance. 3. Struggling in Private Lessons Private lessons can be incredibly valuable, but they can also create pressure. Players often feel like they must justify the money being spent on their development. Growth takes time. A successful lesson doesn’t always produce immediate game results. Development is a process, not an overnight transformation. Trust the process and allow players to build ownership of their development. 4. How Coaches Respond After Tough Losses Every coach faces moments when their team struggles. The question isn’t whether mistakes will happen—they will. The question is how we respond. Players need correction, but they also need perspective. Great coaches challenge players while still protecting their confidence. When players feel supported, they embrace growth. When they feel judged, they often avoid challenges. 5. Supporting New and Struggling Players Every team has players at different stages of development. Some have played for years. Others are stepping onto the field for the first time. Coaches and teammates have the opportunity to create an environment where every player feels valued. A player’s future in the game can be shaped by how they’re treated during their earliest experiences. The Big Question Are you building pressure, or are you building confidence? Confident players play freely. Confident players stay in the game longer. Confident players continue growing through failure. Whether you’re a parent, coach, or teammate, your words matter more than you realize. Because baseball is about more than performance. It’s about developing people. And that’s what Fungos & Footnotes is all about. Baseball Beyond the Box Score.

  2. May 16

    Player Etiquette: How You Show Up

    Player Etiquette: How You Show Up What separates talented players from trusted teammates? In this episode of Fungos & Footnotes, Addison Williams and Coach T break down the silent tests every coach is constantly evaluating — whether players realize it or not. From showing up early and hustling on and off the field to body language, coachability, emotional control, and respecting the game, this episode dives into the habits that impact playing time, leadership opportunities, recruiting, and long-term success both on and off the diamond. Baseball is more than mechanics and stats. It reveals character, discipline, accountability, and how players respond when adversity hits. Coaches aren’t just building lineups — they’re building culture. In This Episode Why showing up early matters The importance of hustle and energy How body language affects performance What coaches mean by “being coachable” Respecting teammates, opponents, and the game How mindset impacts team culture Why etiquette can separate players with similar talent Lessons baseball teaches beyond the field Key Takeaway Talent may open doors, but attitude, work ethic, and player etiquette keep them open. Whether you’re a player, parent, or coach, this episode offers practical insight into what truly stands out to coaches and why the little things matter more than most people realize. Listen, Subscribe & Share If this episode encouraged you, share it with a player, parent, or coach who loves the game. Because baseball doesn’t just reveal talent — it reveals character. And the footnotes matter. Support the movement by buying us a coffee. We appreciate you! #FungosAndFootnotes #BaseballPodcast #YouthBaseball #PlayerDevelopment #BaseballCulture #Leadership #Mindset

  3. May 2

    Why the Best Teammates Become the Best Players | Episode 9

    Talent might get you on the roster — but character gets you on the field. In this episode, Addison and Coach T break down why the players coaches trust the most aren’t always the most talented — they’re the best teammates. From work ethic and body language to dugout presence and baseball IQ, this episode gives players and parents a clear roadmap to earning more opportunities and becoming indispensable to their team. Key Takeaways Coaches value character over talent Work ethic, attitude, coachability, and IQ rank above skill Your role today doesn’t define your future Non-starters can earn trust and playing time through consistency The Dugout Test is real Coaches evaluate players when they’re not in the game Body language impacts playing time Over 70% of coaches say negative body language hurts opportunities Discipline vs. consistency You can have discipline without consistency — but not the other way around Baseball IQ is built through attention Watching, learning, and staying engaged separates players Pressure kills performance The game is already hard — don’t make it harder mentally Parents play a major role Encourage growth, don’t add pressure Memorable Lines “Your talent gets you on the roster. Your character gets you on the field.” “The moment you check out, the coach checks out on you.” “Be a trusted player — and an even better teammate.” “You don’t rise to the occasion — you fall back on your preparation.” Action Steps for Players Show up early. Stay late. Be the best teammate in the dugout. Control your body language — always. Stay locked in, even when you’re not playing. Look for ways to help your team win (charts, energy, communication). Embrace your role — then outgrow it. For Parents Support > pressure Encourage effort, not outcomes Help your player focus on development, not comparison Timestamps 0:00 – Intro 2:00 – What coaches actually look for 6:30 – Character vs. talent 10:00 – The Dugout Test 15:30 – Why baseball is so hard (and mindset matters) 20:00 – Body language & playing time 24:00 – Parent perspective 28:00 – Final takeaways Topics Covered How to go from non-starter to starter Building trust with coaches Baseball IQ and awareness Team chemistry and leadership Parent-player dynamics Subscribe for weekly episodes on baseball development, recruiting, and mindset. #BaseballPodcast #PlayerDevelopment #BaseballMindset #FungosAndFootnotes Support the Podcast If this episode helped you, consider supporting the show by buying us a coffee. : )

  4. Apr 18

    The LineUp: Starters, Non-Starters, and What Really Matters

    The lineup card can build you… or break you — depending on how you see it. In this episode of Fungos & Footnotes, host Addison Williams and Coach T (Corey Thornton) pull back the curtain on what lineup decisions really mean — and what they don’t. Too often, players attach their identity to a spot in the order. Parents read into it. Coaches feel pressure around it. But the truth? The lineup isn’t about labels — it’s about roles, matchups, and helping a team function at its highest level. This episode breaks it all down. From how lineups are actually constructed… to what separates starters from non-starters… to how players can respond the right way — this is real, honest baseball insight that applies at every level. In this episode: How coaches really build lineups (it’s deeper than “best hitters first”) Why your batting order spot does not define you What starters owe their team beyond performance How non-starters actually earn more playing time The parent playbook for navigating playing time conversations What college scouts are truly paying attention to If you’re a player, coach, or parent — this conversation matters more than you think. Subscribe for new episodes every week. Want to support the show? If this episode gave you perspective, helped your player, or changed how you see the game — you can support Fungos & Footnotes by buying us a coffee. Every contribution helps us keep creating real, honest content for players and families who love the game. Buy Us a Coffee: buymeacoffee.com/fungosandfootnotes This isn’t just a podcast — it’s a mission to develop better players, stronger families, and a deeper love for the game. #FungosAndFootnotes #BaseballPodcast #YouthBaseball #BaseballCoaching #TheLineUp #BaseballParents #CollegeBaseball

    19 min
  5. Apr 18

    Successful Youth Practices

    Most youth practices look busy — but busy isn’t the same as productive. In this episode, Addison and Coach T break down what separates great practices from average ones. From maximizing a single cage to building real game instincts on the field, this episode gives coaches, parents, and players a clear blueprint for development that actually transfers. What We Cover: Inside Practice Why standing around kills development — and how to eliminate it How to maximize one batting cage (live BP, front toss, tee work, short hops) Getting up to 11 players active at once with one cage and one bullpen Creative side work: jump rope, arm care, resistance training Tee drill variations: top hand, lead hand, stop at contact, stop at extension Bullpens Why pitchers should throw more reps from the stretch The value of adding a live hitter in bullpen work The 105/95 Rule: practice at 105%, compete at 95% Incorporating pickoffs, slide steps, and pitch-outs Why bullpen success doesn’t always translate — and how to fix it Outside Practice Coach T’s framework: Reps → Team Skills → Situational/Instinct → Competition Running multiple fungos to maximize reps Developing players at multiple positions (no early specialization) Fixing common relay coverage mistakes using live runners Building instinct through game-speed reps Why sandlot baseball is disappearing — and how coaches can replace it Practicing with another team to increase intensity and competition \]\ Resources: Practice Blueprint PDF Connect & Subscribe: If this episode helped you, share it with a coach, parent, or player. This is a movement beyond just a podcast, so if you feel benefited, support by ‘buying us a coffee:  buymeacoffee.com/fungosandfootnotes Follow and subscribe for more conversations on development, mindset, and the lessons that last beyond the final out. Closing Thought: Fungos & Footnotes — because the game shapes you, and the footnotes matter.

  6. Apr 4

    Development under Pressure: Keeping it Fun in Youth Sports

    Fungos & Footnotes — Show Notes Episode: “Development Under Pressure” Hosts: Addison Williams & Coach T Episode Summary Private lessons are at an all-time high, but kids are more burned out than ever. Addison and Coach T explore the fine line between healthy development and harmful pressure in youth baseball — and how parents and coaches can tell the difference. Key Topics Covered 1. The Tipping Point — When Development Becomes Pressure Signs your player has hit the tipping point: dreading practice, performance anxiety, paralysis by analysis Skipping the base: why rushing advanced training backfires like skipping math fundamentals Confidence drops despite more training — what it means and what to do 2. The Psychology of Pressure “This is a game of failure” — why players need permission to fail When parents invest thousands, kids feel like they can’t fail — and that mindset kills performance How a single thought can cause a physical reaction (blushing, freezing up) The pressure to perform comes from within — not coaches or parents Why MLB teams now have full psychology departments 3. The “Don’t Mess Up” Trap Your brain doesn’t process “do not” — it hears the action anyway Internal soundtrack: “don’t strike out” vs. “be aggressive” Pete Rose’s mindset: one intention every at-bat, every pitch Aggressiveness is the antidote to pressure — be the linebacker on the blitz 4. What Great Development Actually Looks Like A coach who genuinely cares — the most important factor Kids need downtime; under-12 players need to just be kids Encouragement should always outweigh correction Making lessons fun: the Hitting Game Belt story Why lessons don’t always show up in games (lesson speed ≠ game speed) Training as “deposits in a bank” — withdrawals come with time 5. How Many Practices/Lessons Is Too Many? Practical guideline for under-12: 2 practices/week + 1 lesson + tournament every other weekend Let the player be the instigator — “Daddy, let’s go play catch” Baseball is a late-blooming, long-game sport — don’t rush it The Development Check System (Addison’s 3-Point Framework) Check the framework here. Joy Check — If the joy is gone, development won’t last Confidence Check — Are they walking off the field taller or smaller? Transfer Check — Are lessons carrying over into the game? Look for it in warmups, not just results. Quotable Moments “The body already knows what to do — the brain gets in the way.” “Development should build confidence, not pressure.” “If your kid is working harder than ever but enjoying the game less than ever — it might not be a training issue, it might be a perspective issue.” “We can have fun when we have success. We can have success when we are relaxed and we are prepared.”

  7. Mar 28

    Mike Matheny’s Letter to the Parents | Episode 4

    Episode Overview Addison and Coach T break down Mike Matheny’s viral “Letter to the Parents” (circa 2005–2006), unpacking timeless truths about parent involvement in youth baseball—from rec ball to high school to college. What We Cover Introduction (0:00–3:31) The mission of Fungos & Footnotes: development, recruiting, mindset, leadership, and lessons that last beyond the final out Cold Open (0:25–3:31) Why Matheny’s letter still matters today A must-hear for parents, players, and coaches at every level The Real Issue: Parent Burnout (1:30–3:30) Kids burn out when the game becomes about parent approval, not love of the game Frustration from parents creates a link between performance and disapproval Many players quit—not because they don’t love baseball—but to escape pressure Core Message: It’s Not About You (3:32–4:56) The biggest issue: parents making the game about themselves Living through your child = Shift the focus: Team over ego Development over outcome Presence ↓ (less interference), not ↑ Coaching Philosophy & Expectations (4:57–9:28) Coach T’s Preseason Approach Equal playing time (when possible) Quality > Quantity (4 games is enough for development) No back-to-back pitching for youth arms Parents stay out of the dugout No coaching from the stands → players need a single voice A clear “handshake agreement” with parents Three Core Values Teach the game the right way Develop young men Do it with class Character > Winning Championship Perspective (11:40–12:08) Only a tiny fraction of Little League players ever reach MLB Championships don’t define long-term success Losses often teach more than wins Silent Support (14:02–21:10) The Most Challenging Section — But the Most Important Be quiet, steady, and present Loud encouragement can feel like pressure No coaching from the stands Replace critique with: “I loved watching you play.” What to Avoid Yelling instructions Pointing out mistakes they already know Badmouthing coaches or teammates What Actually Helps Kids already know when they messed up After tough games → give them space Let them come to you Best line you can say: “I had fun watching you compete.” Umpire Etiquette (21:13–40:35) Reality Check Umpires will miss calls There aren’t enough quality umpires Yelling makes the problem worse Coach T’s Philosophy Never personal—always respectful Sometimes arguing is about calming your team, not changing the call Games are rarely decided by one call Key Takeaways “Umpires rarely determine the outcome” Poor behavior drives umpires away from the game You never know what someone else is carrying (road rage analogy) Player Development Happens at Home (40:35–48:36) Coaches teach approach and thinking Development happens through reps outside practice The Reality 1–2 practices/week isn’t enough Growth happens in the driveway, backyard, and cages Coach T’s Mindset “Nobody else is doing it today—that’s why we’re going to be better.” Mental Development Ask players: “What were you thinking there?” Teach decision-making, not just mechanics Practice Formula (90 Minutes) 30 min: Fundamentals & reps 30 min: Game situations 30 min: Competitive/fun Why This Letter Still Matters (48:36–52:32) Context Written during the rise of select baseball Before social media amplified bad behavior One of the first times someone said this out loud Universal Truth Not every parent struggles—but many do The key question: “Am I helping… or hindering?” Defined Roles Players → Compete & grow Parents → Support & encourage Coaches → Teach & lead Umpires → Manage the game Growth requires clarity and ownership Call to Action Read the full letter, linked here: https://dt5602vnjxv0c.cloudfront.net/portals/7572/docs/mikemathenylettertoparents.pdf Talk about it with your family Apply it Be the parent your kid needs—not the one the game warns about

    27 min
  8. Mar 3

    Episode 1: Season Before the Season: Preparing Players, Parents & Coaches for Baseball Success

    Episode Title: Season Before the Season: Preparing Players, Parents & Coaches for Baseball Success Show Description: Welcome to the inaugural episode of Fungos and Footnotes – the podcast where baseball meets the deeper side of the game. This show is for players, parents, and coaches who care about more than just box scores. What We Cover: In this episode, hosts Coach Cory Thornton (57, 35 years of coaching experience including 18 years at the college level) and his co-host (34, former player and showcase director) discuss the critical pre-season preparation period and cut through the noise of social media hype. Key Topics: The Name Explained: Why “Fungos and Footnotes” captures the unseen work and hidden lessons that shape players Meet Your Hosts: Combined 50+ years of baseball experience from youth to college level The Season Before the Season: Why December matters – and how not to waste it Player Preparation Essentials: Proper arm care and strength building progressions Quality hitting work over quantity The critical role of sleep and nutrition in recovery Why rest periods are non-negotiable Parent Guidance: Stop chasing every opportunity and comparison trap How parents unintentionally create entitlement The importance of accountability over excuses Development isn’t loud – trust quiet progress Coaching Philosophy: Your impact lasts longer than the season Building accountability and mental toughness Bridging the gap between high school and summer ball Core Message: You can’t win the championship in December, but you can lose it. Focus on fundamentals over gimmicks, health over flashiness, and being better over being seen. Coming Next Episode: Playing time – the conversations, the frustration, and the reality every baseball family faces. Connect With Us: Twitter | Facebook | Instagram | |YouTube Because the game shapes you, and the footnotes matter.

    22 min

About

Where baseball meets the deeper side of the game. This show is for players, parents, and coaches who care about more than just box scores.