AllVolinGA
VOL by birth
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Simple answer: coaching
Mike Hamilton. An employee or company is only as good as it's management. Poor management and it trickled down.
In fairness to Raleigh, he did inherit an academic mess and reduction in scholarships from Delmonico.
That said, he might have been the worst baseball man I've ever met.
In reference to East and Middle Tennessee being hotbeds of recruiting... That is a recent phenomena (last 10 years or so).
Historically, the best baseball in the state came out of Germantown, Christian Bros, MUS, and Houston in the West, Oakland in the Mid-State, and DB and Science Hill from upper East Tennessee.
Farragut's reign of terror didn't begin until the early 2000s.
LOL. Hamilton's legendary (or lack thereof) status is growing. He had nothing to do with it before the 2000's. The OP asked why we were historically so bad, even after 1951. I know Hamilton made a bad hire in Raleigh, but....
None of the SEC schools really cared about baseball for most of their history.
Assistant football coaches at most schools received supplemental pay for coaching other sports with baseball offering the most presitige and money. Some schools put football players on scholarships in other sports just to increase football roster.
Alabama won the most SEC titles during these dark ages and this wasn't out of real effort.
Mississippi State changed this soemwhat in the early 80s as they stared drawing large crowds and making it more visible. LSU took this to new levels. UGA won a national title in 1990 on the back of two pitchers basically and no one in Athens really cared.
LSU started making some really money and winning national titles and everyone esle took notice. Relatively speaking, it did not take much money or effort to show baseball some love. Stadiums are still relatively small. Baseball coaches still make far less than football coaches. Scholarship numbers are kept artificially low.
The baseball arms battles began basically in about 1993-1997. New or improved stadiums were popping up. The quality of coaches greatly improved with some long time coaches who kept their jobs due to low expectations were kicked out. Even Vanderbilt and Ketnucky finally got rid of Mewborne and Keith Madison respectively.
Delmonico came to Tennessee
Andy Lopez came to Florida
Ron Polk "retired" from Miss. State and went to Georgia then back to MSU
South Carolina dropped June Raines for Ray Tanner
And it's not just Tennessee and the SEC that was "bad". Few schools really cared about baseball. USC has the most national titles because they care at least a little bit. Same with Arizona State. At least Miami in the 80s had a little competition to deal with.
The late 90s was the Golden Era. I have seen some slipping since then as I think several schools have scaled back in the post-9/11 economy as the ROI has not been what they had hoped.
I think one of the reasons for apathy is the oddball schedule college baseball is stuck with. Its hard to get interested when snow is on the ground. About the time most people get interested in baseball, the season ends. In the old days, when for the most part a college year began in the fall and ended in the spring, it was logical. That's no longer true and the main driver of fan interest, television, doesn't take the summer off. I think its time the college baseball season was adjusted to reality. The CWS could make a nice tapering off of summer just before the football season started.
I know about Raleigh. But I am talking about pre Delmonico Tennessee baseball. I was looking at our overall record against the other SEC schools and it is really not very good. Why were we a bad baseball program after the 1951 runner up year?
This is an interesting point, but the "college year" still ends in May. I know football is mostly year around now, but the summer work is low key, and the players still get days off. I don't think it would be fair to ask baseball players to perform at a high level in the middle of the summer while still having to attend classes all year. Maybe that is just me.
What else are these guys going to be doing in the summer? Remember, at this level, they've made a serious commitment to the game, even those who don't envision a MLB future. I doubt seriously they'd resent a couple of fewer days at the beach.
1. The draft would then come in the middle of season.
2. Short Season and rookie ball would begin shortly after the draft with colleges still playing ball
3. Very traditional summer leagues already wait for some college guys, they can't wait for all of them
4. College guys already have to attend to semesters, having them play in summer would require additional scholarship and other money. For a sport that loses money at 99.9 of schools, how many schools would want to play for another semester and training tables?
5. WE IN THE SOUTH DON'T CARE THAT THE BIG 10 SUCK IN BASEBALL. Moving the season would only improve this marginally and would likely hurt succesful small schools whose talent would be spread to larger northern schools. East Carolina, Coastal Carolina, Rice, Fullerton, Fla International, Fla. Atlantic, Wake Forest, LA-Lafayette.
The one positive would involve Vanderbilt. A huge hunk of their best players are from north of the Mason-Dixon line. If those guys could go to Big10 or other northern programs and see no drop off in games played, why would they go to Vanderbilt?