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.

âšľ 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 = đźš©
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

Development v. Winning : What’s the cost in youth sports? | Episode 3

PlayPlay

🏆 Development vs. Winning: What Really Matters in Youth Baseball ⚾️

Your kid’s team just won the tournament. Rings are being handed out, everyone’s celebrating… but here’s the real question: Did the players actually get better?

In Episode 3 of Fungos and Footnotes, we’re diving into the trap of youth baseball—where the system rewards winning, but often at the expense of true player development.

In this episode:
âś… Why locking kids into positions too early limits their potential
âś… The hidden cost of chasing big-name teams and tournament rings
âś… How to find coaches who prioritize development over trophies
âś… The truth about parent pressure and youth burnout (70% of kids quit by age 13)
âś… What questions to ask at tryouts to find the right fit

The bottom line: The box score tells you who won today, but the footnotes tell you who’s actually getting better. 📊

If your kid wants to be a baseball player—not just like the idea of playing—development has to come first. Because that 8-year-old stepping into select ball won’t be the same player dominating at 17.

Next week: Metheny’s Letter to the Parents

Playing Time: Habits, Attitude, and Growth | Episode 2

Playing Time: What Actually Earns You Reps | Fungos and Footnotes EP 2

Playing time isn’t about talent alone—it’s earned through practice habits, attitude, and effort. In this episode, we break down what coaches actually look for, how to handle the bench, and why youth championships at 12 don’t matter as much as you think. Real talk for players, parents, and coaches.

TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 – Intro
0:25 – Why Playing Time Feels Personal (But Isn’t)
1:37 – Practice Habits: What Coaches Actually See
5:53 – Building Team Trust
7:43 – Emotional Control & Leadership
12:50 – Identity vs. Entitlement
15:10 – Coach’s Honest Take on Playing Time
19:48 – Youth Development: The Long Game
25:50 – Love the Game First
30:25 – Habits Last, Playing Time Changes
34:01 – The Bench Is a Wake-Up Call, Not Punishment
39:54 – Final Advice: Players Control Effort, Attitude & Habits
41:09 – Next Episode: Development vs. Winning

The game shapes you. The footnotes matter.

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

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.


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Because the game shapes you, and the footnotes matter.