Thursday, October 25, 2018

Confessions of a Travel Softball Coach Part 6: New Life

Make Sure to Read All of My Confessions of a Travel Softball Coach



There was only one option left, a surprisingly local team that had a ton of girls that Aubree now went to school with. I can remember going to that tryout like it was yesterday. There were some decent players on that team, but by and large, it was not a good team. They were a step above rec.  Instead of Aubree showing out, she played down to that level and the coach told us we needed to come back.

It wasn't a yes, but it wasn't a no.

I explained to the coach that she was better than she was showing. Alyse tells me, to this day, that she was clearly better than that team deserved, but I....as usual....expected too much out of her. So when he said he needed to see her again, I thought "this is it." And, to be honest, I told Aubree that too. I realize, now, that was way too much to put on a little girl

We came back the next practice. She played well, or at least well enough. She made the team. Crisis averted, momentarily. Expectations for her future were tempered severely after the stress of trying to find a team. 

Life was good, at least in terms of convenience. The practices were five minutes from home and the girls all went to school together. Aubree immediately made good friends with several of the players and they are currently good friends, despite what will transpire over the next few posts. 

Travel ball life began. Of course, I wasn't a coach and I was now fishing two clubs and becoming very competitive. Between the fishing tournaments and ball tournaments, I would be lucky to show up at the park with raccoon eyes, smelly, and dead tired. 

I would help a little bit with practice, but the coaching staff was pretty much set and they didn't seem interested in my thoughts. I accepted that and I understood that this team had been together before we got there and it wouldn't be fair for the new guy to show up. In this case, as in a lot of teams' case, this began as a rec ball team and they had been together for several years.  

Still, the practices still weren't what I was hoping to find. It sure wasn't what I had seen on the better travel teams that we had tried out with. It was a lot of the same thing I have seen over and over: setting a defense and hitting grounders, sticking the weaker players in the outfield and essentially ignoring them.  That didn't mean they weren't used. They were a stop-gap to hits, not to get outs. To be fair, there weren't a lot of fly balls getting hit, anyway.

Hitting seemed to be secondary to the game. That was fine with me, since Aubree was in hitting lessons and I was working with her some at home. She needed work with her arm and her fielding. 

The team was winning some games, but to be fair, they were playing C-Class tournaments. It was a nice break-in to the world of travel ball and we were doing it at our pace and there is something to be said about that. So, when asked to commit after the fall season, we didn't think Aubree had any prospects, so we agreed. It certainly helped that the team would be doing off-season workouts two minutes from our house.

I became invested when none of the other coaches came to the winter workouts except me and the head coach. I believed that this meant I was going to become a field coach and I saw enough from the players to believe, with some tweaking, we could have a solid team. While the other players played volleyball, or didn't come, or whatever, Aubree made every practice and she got better. It didn't hurt that I was pushing her harder than any player there, perhaps in excess.

When we hit the field in the spring, it was immediately clear that I was not considered a coach and I was pointed to the stands. The low tempo practices started again, with essentially no focus on hitting. The base coaching wasn't great, and it got us a lot of bad outs. Outfield was a black hole, largely because no one ever worked with the outfield. It was just a place holder for three players. 

With that said, the defense was pretty solid, at least in the infield. With that D and some streaky hitting, the team managed to get a few tournament finals appearances, which always seemed to happen on the coldest, rainiest nights in the spring. At least we were staying close to home, never driving more than 30-45 minutes.  I would come to find out that this was a bad thing, in terms of the level of competition we were playing. 

Aubree did have some highlights. She had a walk-off hit in a bracket game. She was constantly throwing people out at first from shallow right field. She played well at second, but there was another player entrenched at that position and there was no thought of moving either. They simply shared time. 

It's about this time that I came to the revelation that Aubree wasn't going to play in the infield other than second, but she could play three outfield positions, so we really began working at home on outfielding. I found it funny that while I wanted to have a daughter who was a better player than me, she was going to end up just like me: a natural outfielder who could also play infield well, which I still do. 

One thing was becoming clear: she has a great eye for the ball and pitchers could not pitch to her. She was almost automatic to get on base. She was showing promise as a lefty, just not enough to use in a game. What this meant was, she was walking a lot, watching a lot of strikes, and not improving as a hitter. Even at that time, I understood that it would be a good thing in the long run for her to switch hit, but it was frustrating to not see immediate improvements. Walking was just fine for her coach, who was happy with just having base runners. It began to dawn on me the true importance of aggressive hitting. 

Issues, which all travel ball teams experience, began to crop up. It began when the coach began to pickup players, despite having enough of our own players to play a tournament. Then, it became a weekly occurrence. Then it became multiple players every tournament. When this happens, someone has to sit. It wasn't always Aubree, but it was unnerving. 

Eventually, we made the decision to move on from this team, though we made connections that didn't seem particularly important at the time, but would be vital to us down the road. Some of these were the very players that picked up with the team that caused us to leave. It just goes to show that sometimes we make assumptions about people that couldn't be further from the truth, but we may judge them guilty by association. 

Lesson's Learned


  • There's a home for your player, somewhere. It may not be forever.
  • You can outhit bad defense. He can't out defense bad hitting (this is my mantra, to this day).
  • Don't wait too long to develop defense.  It takes just as much time to develop as infielding. 
  • Build on strengths, pick up weaknesses as you go.
  • Roster management is a full-time job and everyone will not be happy. Accept it. 
  • Get to know parents and make no assumptions, especially due to the situation in which you meet them.

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Fishing Report for Wheeler 10/21/18

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"Fun fishing" isn't something that I've been able to do in the last few years. With three kids who are all playing at least one sport at a time, the only time I can get it out is typically to prefish. It's certainly caused some mental changes, in terms of every trip out is about finding the fish and preparing for a tournament. It's also made it hard to just relax and JUST FISH. 

With our jobs now on a flex schedule where we are off every other Friday, I was thinking it would be really easy to start having a low stress day on the water. Alas, with a wife who works not one, but two jobs and having to pull my weight with the kids, I have yet to get on the water on one of those Fridays. 

This past weekend, our NASA club had their Classic but Aubree has a tournament. Since I am the coach, skipping it wasn't really in the cards, though I have on occasion done just that. Not this time. 

Wouldn't you know it, the tournament got canceled. So, Josh and I decided we would take a leisurely trip out Sunday morning to Ditto Landing on Wheeler. 

We got on the water around noon and started poking around some of our spots. With a good amount of current and a lot of sunlight, I really thought the smallies would be on fire. But, a fish her and a fish there, no brownies. More importantly, the fish weren't grouped up like we thought they would be. Or, at least they weren't biting. 

After messing around down river, we began a slow migration up river, hitting some places as we went. The further up we went, the more bait we saw. Eventually we started catching white bass. Then, occasionally we would catch a spot or largemouth. The further up we went, the more we caught.

By the time we were within sight of the dam, we started to figure out something.

After catching no more than one fish on any one spot, I caught back to back spots on a Strike King 5XD on the exact cast. We were pretty excited, at least until it became obvious that two was the magic number and we should move on. At this point, we had caught five keepers with some decent size amount them, maybe hitting the eight pound mark. All the fish were fat, just fairly small.

As we began hitting current breaks (TVA had the flood gates open and there was a lot of color in the water) I finally figured out that these fish wanted exactly one bait and one bait only: a jig. It took Josh catching three consecutive fish on the same cast for me to put down the collection of baits I had been throwing. I had thought a jerkbait would be the deal, but the water had too much clarity. I had caught a few on a Pop-R, one or two on the A-rig, and about three on the crank. Nothing on the shakey head, which I doggedly stuck to as he was catching some really good quality spots.

Eventually, I picked up the jig and made the same cast Josh had been making with terrific success. Thump. And the drag went to screaming.

Now, it wouldn't be the first time that I didn't set the drag on a reel. If you recall, we missed a Top 10 finish in the Alabama Bass Trail event on Logan-Martin because I didn't set the drag on my new reel and a three to four pounder tossed the jig. 

But, when I realized that the drag was set, it was just a big fish...

I boat swung a four pound spot. 

Before we knew it, we had put together a solid river fish limit of around 12-13 pounds. 

Then the siren sounded and TVA turned the turbines WAY up. While the Ultrex could keep us in the right spot, we couldn't get our jigs down to the fish. We worked our way around some other spots, but never found another pile of fish. 

We didn't catch a ton, ending the day with 10 fish, but there was some good quality among them. Jigs are definitely what needs to be thrown. The water level is almost at winter pool but the warm temps have kept bait from really transitioning and with them, the bass have still stayed fairly spread out. 




Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Fishing Report for Wilson 10/6/18

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As we have done every year, we drew out the lake for our club classic. Wouldn't you know it, Wilson was pulled. That would mean we've fished Wilson twice and Guntersville twice, I wasn't going to complain. The last time we had the classic on Wilson, Brad and I weighed in over 20 pounds and took a win. It was truly the most eye-opening experience I have had, in terms of executing a game plan. You can read about that 20 pound bag and watch the video by clicking the link below. 


Unlike previous years, a new rule had been passed where the lake was off-limits after the draw. That kinda sucked. But on Wilson, the game plan for fishing the back end of summer (even though it was October) was to fish the dam. Really, the only question was, would be spend any time anywhere else? Without being able to pre-fish, we were really limited to what we knew.

So, at blast-off, we headed to the dam. There wasn't any current early in the morning and the recent pattern was that TVA would cut some one around 10-11AM and then a good bit more around 12-1. So, we spend the morning fishing around the face of the dam, looking for schooling largemouth.

Largemouth on the face of the dam had been the only pattern we had found just a few months ago on our last tournament on Wilson and with water and air temps just as hot now as they were then, it was a reasonable assumption that nothing had changed. 

It seemed early on that our assumptions were right. I hooked up with a keeper largemouth on a pop-r really quick, but lost it. I was able to catch a good sized largemouth soon after. A few misses here and there and the bite went away. I went to work with a shakey head and a jig, just as I had a month ago, but unlike then, I wasn't able to get a sniff.

Around 9AM, we hadn't boated another fish, so we decided to run down to the mouth of Bluewater Creek to see if we could find some active fish. We began on the very far end of the rock piles and I caught a small smallie on the very first cast and I thought maybe we were on to something, but that turned out to be fool's gold. We didn't waste very long on this because when that spot had been on, it happened quick. 

Around 11AM, the current did kick on, but not nearly to the level we thought it would be, It went from 18,000 CFS to around the mid-20s. Again, no bites. Not only for us, but none of the other boats around us were catching fish either. 

At 1PM, the siren sounded and the current kicked way up. Then people started catching fish. 

We boated one keeper, then another, then another. Then we hit a cold streak from 2-3PM. Truth be told, I hadn't caught another measuring fish while Brad had caught all three of the fish on a crank while I alternated baits. Even though I did eventually catch a few shorts on a worm, I decided to pick up the crank and start hammering away with it. Eventually, I did catch our 5th fish, a nice smallie at that, and culled up a small keeper with another sizable chunk. 

We did catch several fish in short order including a lot of drum, but the size went down after the initial flurry.

We knew how tough it had been, but the boats around us had caught enough fish that I knew it would be tight. I didn't think anyone not fishing the dam would have a chance. When the water temps are in the 80s on Wilson, it seems the only consistent bite is at the dam, even though it may take you all day to get five bites.

We arrived back at the ramp a few minutes early and we decided to crank the rip-tap along the ramp. On one of my lasts casts, I set the hook on something big and I was really excited.....only to find out that it was a turtle. I didn't bother getting my crank. 

Turned out that my assumptions had been right. No one from down river had anything of note. We had 10 pounds, which was good for second, just behind a slightly better bag that had also been caught in the near vicinity. 

It wasn't the day we dreamed of, for sure. But we ended the year super strong! I believe Brad didn't get a check in only two tournaments in the club while I did slightly worse, but not by much. He even managed to win one without me!

In all, we caught less than 10 fish with the biggest being a touch over three. The big fish of the tournament didn't break four pounds. Water temps were in the 80s all day with good visibility. 


Tuesday, October 2, 2018

Fishing Report for Wheeler 9/28/18

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After taking a week off of our little wildcat to fish the last stop (or first, which was moved) of the Alabama Bass Trail on Pickwick, Josh and I were both....hungry......to get back on the water as soon as possible. The ABT on Pickwick was brutal, and not just for us, but painful enough that we needed to get back to catching fish. 

If you recall, we had won back to back weeks on the upper end of Wheeler lake. We had done it without really catching a good bag. It's been super tough due to high water temps. You can read about the two trips by clicking the links below.
With that said, the two wins came two completely different ways. The first tournament was easy to catch fish and it was a question of finding the better fish. We had about three spots around Ditto that we were catching good numbers. We weren't doing anything special, just junk fishing around. It was a question of which spots held the better fish.

But the very next week, we couldn't buy a bite at any spot within two or three miles of Ditto and eventually decided to run all the way to Guntersville dam. Once there, we had about two hours to find five fish, which we did. It wasn't pretty and essentially it only took a limit to win. 

With that knowledge, we still debated what to do considering the high water and high current we would be fishing. We had thought that surely the fishing down river around Ditto would be good and considering the amount of trash floating in the water, a trip back from the dam in the dark wasn't appealing. The water temp wasn't as low as we thought it would be. It was still in the 80s, but at least TVA was pushing 100K CFS through Guntersville. 

At 7PM, we hadn't had a single bite. Not one. We had covered a lot of water and thrown a lot of different baits but it didn't matter if it was a rock pile, a point, or the back of a pocket, the fish weren't biting. So began the discussion. Was the risk of hitting logs worth a piddly $20 bill? Catching fish and winning is fun, but we both knew the risk.

So, we decided that would go to the dam, but pay special attention to where the trash was and take extra time getting back in the dark.

By the time we got to the dam, it was almost completely dark and the current and waves due to the flood gates being opened was kinda scary. But, we went to work.

Based upon our experience, we knew there is about a 50 yard stretch that would hold a lot of fish, but never seemed to hold quality. But that this point, we figured just having five would get us a win and if we could get a few above average bites, it would likely seal the deal.

So, we went to work with a PowerTeam Lures 7" tickler and the bites began. The only issue we had was that this spot is extremely sticky and I was averaging about a fish per shaky head. Eventually I just sat two packs of heads and the bag of worms on the deck. In about an hour, we caught around 15 fish. Surprisingly, only two didn't measure and we began to cull. It wasn't big culls, but ounces would matter. 

During the flurry, I set the hook on a fish and when asked if I needed the net, I told Josh that it wasn't any bigger than any of the rest of the fish we were catching. About the time I boat flipped it, I realized it was actually a really good river fish. 

The funniest part of the day was when Josh boated a fish on the jig. When it hit the carpet, it threw the jig and went to flopping. Josh tried a kick-save it but it just sent the fish back in the drink. It was a solid two pounder and it hurt to lose, but we couldn't help but laugh.

We made a slow steady run back to the ramp to find that no one had caught anything. The big fish I caught ( a little over three pounds) weighed more than all the other fish combined. We took home a win with just under 10 pounds, which was shocking considering we went the majority of the evening without a single bite. 

A lot of people will read this and scoff about winning a little buddy tournament. I get it. This isn't about bragging. This is about staying sharp and focused on fishing, especially after getting your rear end handed to you all season by the best fishermen in the southeast. Sometimes you need a little confidence booster, and this was certainly that.