Ridley Park Athletic Club: Softball

Tuesday, October 27
2010 SOFTBALL SIGNUP DATES ANNOUNCED!

The signup dates for the 2010 season have been announced!

RPAC will hold signups on the following dates at the clubhouse: 

  1. Wednesday – February 10th
  2. Wednesday – February 17th
  3. Saturday – February 20th
  4. Wednesday – February 24th 

Gym time for the regular season starts the week of March 3rd.

Please check back often for updates.



Softball Trophies
 

BANQUET TROPHIES

If you did not attend the banquet and would like to pick up your child's softball or baseball trophy, please contact Greg Foltz @ foltzy68@yahoo.com to make arrangements. 



For questions about Softball, please contact Greg Foltz at 610-809-9948 or foltzy68@yahoo.com

 



Thursday, May 28
Softball - KEYS to SUCCESS

SOFTBALL - KEYS TO SUCCESS

Do not blame teammates, umpires, coaches, fans, or the position of the moon for your performance. Take responsibility for what happens on the field. Stand up, make no excuses, and refuse the excuses that others might offer you. Excuses get in the way of learning because mistakes are denied. Be accountable. Remember you are not expected to be a perfect performer. No one is. Fast pitch Softball is not an easy game to play.

Always hustle, run out every ground ball and pop up, encourage your teammates, especially after an error, bad pitch, or a strike out, carry yourself with pride and dignity. Do not in frustration throw equipment. Do not ridicule another team or an opposing player’s name, physical appearance, skill. Do not taunt. Do not distract an opposing player with low-level antics. Be positive with teammates. Never ridicule or criticize your teammates. They need your encouragement the most immediately after they have made a mistake. Show your teammates, your opponents, the entire world the values you hold dear by how you play.

Never Yield. Never Yield. Regardless of what the scoreboard says, you are never defeated unless you give up, unless you go belly up. No opponent can make you do this. Giving up is something you do. Regardless of what the scoreboard says, no opponent can extinguish the flame in your heart or crush the intensity of your will without your consent. Never surrender!!!

Ignore those things outside your control: the judgments of umpires, the conduct and ability of other teams, the weather, your amount of playing time, the final score (this is a tough one). Do not show frustration or disappointment. Do not allow your opponents to gain joy from your inability to cope with self-pity. Do not throw equipment or whine in anger or slump your shoulders. Such behavior impresses no one. Maintain your poise. Learn, prepare, and focus on the next event. We cannot change the past. Instead, we should focus on the next action with determination, joy, and resolve.

Your effort, your attitude, your commitment, and your approach to the game are under your control. Be enthusiastic, play with great effort, conduct yourself appropriately, and meet this opportunity with great joy. Listen to your coaches. Be alert, play smartly, and know the signs. You are always accountable. How you react to situations and circumstances reveals the person you are and the person you might become.

No matter what else happens, this game is played one pitch at a time. Focus on the current pitch. If you are a pitcher, what are you throwing now and where? If you are a fielder, what are you going to do if the ball is hit to you? If you are a base runner, what are you going to do on a fly ball, line drive, ground ball, to the right side, to the left side? If you are a batter, what are you trying to accomplish on this pitch? If you are on the bench, how are you helping your team be successful?

The results of your performance are not fully under your control. The other team may be very good, or very bad. The bounces may go your way, or not. But your behavior and approach are under your control. At the end of the game, you, perhaps only, know whether you gave 100%, whether you did all you could to help your team. Those players who did are winners; those players who did not are losers, regardless of what the scoreboard says. Winners take care of the things within their control, enjoy their participation, and are justifiable proud of their effort. Losers make excuses, lose their poise readily, wallow in self-pity, and surrender at the slightest sign of adversity.

Players who are coach-able are always trying to learn more about being successful ballplayers and people. They listen and apply what their coaches and teachers suggest. Are you coach-able? 

Be enthusiastic, positive, give 100%, and understand that relentless effort in the pursuit of excellence is its own reward. The joyous warrior exemplifies the slogan “No Retreat & No Surrender.” Win with humility, lose with dignity.