Everything here is built around what baseball athletes actually face — from the 60-foot-6 mound to the longer evaluation window to position-specific throwing mechanics and the professional pathway. This is your performance resource.
Take the Free Pressure Assessment →He throws strikes in the bullpen but loses the zone in the sixth. He squares everything in the cage but expands the zone against live pitching with scouts behind the plate. His release point drifts after one bad inning and the outing unravels. These aren't problems with his training — they're problems with how his nervous system responds to pressure, and they're specific to the way baseball demands execution.
At 60 feet 6 inches with overhand velocity, the mechanical margin and the recovery rhythm between pitches differ from softball — the cascade has more time to build and more time to interrupt.
The overhand delivery cascade is distinct. The most documented yips cases in sport — like Rick Ankiel and Steve Blass — come from this exact mechanical pathway.
Baseball recruiting and scouting often begins earlier and runs longer, with showcase and travel exposure starting young and extending through the draft pathway.
The MLB draft creates a performance-psychology layer with no college equivalent — visible professional stakes that shape the mental game from high school onward.
Whether you're a boy playing baseball or — increasingly — a girl competing in the sport, the context factors above are about how baseball is structured, not about gender. Individual athletes vary; the sport's pressure architecture is what we condition for.
Every path starts with a free pressure assessment. The evaluation call is no-cost and there is no obligation. Space is limited.
Not sure where to start? Take the free 8-minute pressure assessment first. Take the Assessment →