


In attendance on this cold morning were Brad Hellerstedt, Devin Kramer, Grady Lewis, Jack Rozza, Jason Becht, Liam Smith, and Noah Holcomb. The boys started to get to know each other by introducing themselves, how old they were, how long they’ve been playing, their favorite teams, what positions they liked or wanted to play, and other things about themselves (we learned that Jack read the book “The Wizard of Oz” – very impressive!).
Before taking the field for some drills, we talked about what was going to be important to us as a team.
Becoming a good teammate is an important topic for me. We’ve seen examples in the big leagues where a star player, say Barry Bonds, has a reputation of not being a good teammate. Once his usefulness on the playing field is done or diminished, he no longer has a place on that team or any other. Once Barry Bonds was no longer hitting home runs at a record pace or there wasn’t a record to be chased, no team wanted him. No team was willing to have that cancer in their clubhouse for a guy that would hit 20 home runs a season. They could get any number of players that could hit that many home runs that would cause less disruption to their team. Then there are players such as Kevin Millar. For most accounts, Millar is a journeyman player with average major league numbers. What has kept Millar in the big leagues past his production on the field is what he means to his teams off the field. Millar is the guy you want to be around, he makes you laugh, he pats you on the back when you’re in a slump, he makes your team a better team just by sitting on the bench. Millar started his career off as a replacement player during the 1994 strike season, which to most players in that role, was career suicide. Millar’s personality helped him into the majors, and to a Red Sox team that won the World Series. Through Spring Training this year he still is hooking on with teams, with the Cubs this spring.
This goes to show, the better teammate you are, the more welcome you will be on any team. I would love to have more personalities like Kevin Millar rather than Barry Bonds on our team.