BASEBALL COACHES UNPLUGGED Podcast By Ken Carpenter cover art

BASEBALL COACHES UNPLUGGED

BASEBALL COACHES UNPLUGGED

By: Ken Carpenter
Listen for free

About this listen

The Ultimate Baseball Coaching Podcast. Step inside the dugout with Baseball Coaches Unplugged, the must-listen podcast for players, coaches, and parents who want to unlock the secrets of baseball greatness. Hosted by Ken Carpenter, a 27-year coaching veteran, this show delivers exclusive insights from top athletes and coaches, revealing what separates champions from the rest.

Imagine gaining insider access to the mental strategies, elite skills, and game-changing drills that fuel success. Whether you're a coach shaping the next powerhouse team, a player ready to elevate your game, or a parent guiding an athlete’s journey, every episode is packed with real-world lessons on resilience, preparation, and mastery.

From behind-the-scenes stories of triumph and setbacks to the unwritten rules of baseball success, Baseball Coaches Unplugged is your ultimate playbook for thriving on and off the field.


👉 Subscribe and tune in weekly to hear from baseball’s best coaches from across the country.


© 2025 BASEBALL COACHES UNPLUGGED
Baseball & Softball
Episodes
  • Why High School Baseball Matters More Than Travel Ball for Overall Player Development
    Jul 9 2025

    Send us a text

    Baseball's developmental landscape has undergone a massive shift in recent years. The glittering allure of travel baseball—with its showcases, fancy uniforms, and promises of exposure—has many believing it's the superior path to player development. But is it really?

    Drawing from 27 years of high school coaching experience and 8 seasons in travel baseball, Coach Ken Carpenter delivers a thought-provoking analysis of what's truly best for young athletes. The fundamental difference? High school coaches develop student-athletes while travel programs often treat players as clients. This critical distinction changes everything about how players learn the game, handle adversity, and grow as individuals.

    High school baseball offers something travel ball simply cannot: comprehensive development six days a week under coaches who see it all—the triumphs, failures, character under pressure, and classroom performance. These coaches teach players to compete rather than simply perform, to serve rather than expect privilege, and to represent something larger than themselves. Meanwhile, travel baseball's weekend tournament structure, often lacking accountability measures or developmental focus, frequently prioritizes exposure and winning over player growth.

    College coaches still call high school coaches first when evaluating prospects—not for skills assessment, but to understand a player's character, work ethic, and response to adversity. As former MLB manager Joe Madden noted, today's system of over-specialization is burning kids out and filling their heads with false promises. The solution isn't eliminating travel baseball, but creating better collaboration between both worlds with proper oversight, certification requirements, and a shared commitment to what matters most: developing not just better baseball players, but better human beings.

    Subscribe to Baseball Coaches Unplugged for weekly conversations with the game's best coaches who are preserving baseball's soul while navigating its changing landscape. Leave a review and share if you believe in putting player development before business.

    Join the Baseball Coaches Unplugged podcast where an experienced baseball coach delves into the world of high school and travel baseball, offering insights on high school baseball coaching, leadership skills, hitting skills, pitching strategy, defensive skills, and overall baseball strategy, while also covering high school and college baseball, recruiting tips, youth and travel baseball, and fostering a winning mentality and attitude in baseball players through strong baseball leadership and mentality.


    Support the show

    • Follow: Twitter | Instagram @Athlete1Podcast
    • Website - https://www.athlete1.net
    • Sponsor: The Netting Professionals
    • https://www.nettingpros.com



    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • How To Build A State Champion Without Flamethrowing Pitchers
    Jun 25 2025

    Send us a text

    What does it take to build a championship high school baseball program without flame-throwing pitchers or Division I talent? Wisconsin Hall of Fame coach Jeff Ryan pulls back the curtain on his old-school approach that's produced 438 wins and a state championship at small-school Prescott High.

    Ryan's journey from milking cows on a hobby farm to becoming one of Wisconsin's most respected baseball minds reveals how traditional values translate to modern success. "Consistency, fairness, discipline, and professionalism," he shares, form the bedrock of his coaching philosophy. His 2012 state championship team epitomized these principles, displaying what he calls "quiet intensity"—a focused, unflappable demeanor that carried them to a 26-2 record despite not having a single pitcher who threw harder than 78 mph.

    What truly sets Ryan's program apart is his meticulous attention to fundamentals. His teams spend 30 minutes every practice on scripted situations, mastering pickoff plays, controlling the running game, and executing defensive fundamentals that "steal outs" in crucial moments. Ryan's approach to middle infield defense—eschewing the common "alligator funnel" technique for a more precise method—exemplifies his willingness to embrace proven techniques over trendy methods.

    Perhaps most remarkable is Ryan's candor about coaching's challenges. He considers making out the lineup card his most difficult task, understanding that his decisions affect not just players but entire families. His solution for surviving 27 years as a head coach? Setting clear boundaries with parents while maintaining unwavering consistency in how he treats every player, from stars to bench players.

    Ready to transform your coaching approach? Discover why Jeff Ryan believes "baseball doesn't teach us how to win; it teaches us how to lose," and how this philosophy creates not just better players, but better people. Subscribe now to gain insights from one of high school baseball's most thoughtful practitioners.

    Emphasizes four pillars of success: consistency, fairness, discipline, and professionalism
    • Believes making out the lineup card is the most challenging aspect of coaching
    • Credits his 2012 championship team's "quiet intensity" as key to their success
    • Explains how small-school programs can compete through fundamentals rather than pure talent
    • Advocates for 30 minutes of situational practice during each session
    • Shares techniques for controlling the running game and "stealing outs" through pickoff plays
    • Discusses the challenges of coaching longevity and managing parent relationships
    • Focuses on infield defense, particularly middle infield play and bunting fundamentals
    • Views baseball as teaching players how to lose with dignity more than how to win
    • Maintains clear boundaries with parents to survive 27 years as head coach

    Support the show

    • Follow: Twitter | Instagram @Athlete1Podcast
    • Website - https://www.athlete1.net
    • Sponsor: The Netting Professionals
    • https://www.nettingpros.com



    Show more Show less
    53 mins
No reviews yet