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Danny Borrell our new pitching coach
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<blockquote data-quote="GTNavyNuke" data-source="post: 667995" data-attributes="member: 322"><p>Free article from D1 about how the MLB is trying to get college pitching coaches to come work for them. Not going well. The opposite of what Borrell did. Glad we got him!! Summary:</p><p></p><p><em>"College baseball has its advantages for many coaches. There’s more job security in most instances, the in-season life isn’t near as rigorous, and many of these coaches have lucrative financial deals in place. Saarloos is the highest paid pitching coach by a significant margin, Vanderbilt’s Scott Brown and LSU’s Alan Dunn make well north of $300K, Hobbs can get to $300K with incentives, and Yeskie left Oregon State for Arizona for a $60K pay increase, taking his overall salary to around $300K. Kenny, too, has a restructured deal with a salary more than $220K and with a three-year deal in place. In many cases, those salaries, outside of Hobbs, do not include sizable bonus structures. Fetter undoubtedly will get a well-deserved boost after the season the Wolverines had combined with the opportunities that have come his way this summer, too.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>There’s no doubt pro organizations, in most cases, have a treasure chest of money to offer pitching coaches at the college level. But for now, they either haven’t done so, or the coaches have turned down opportunities. There could be a point in time soon when pro organizations decide to overpay in order to entice coaches to leave the college game. But that time – yet – hasn’t arrived.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>College baseball hopes that trend continues. It’s a good place to be."</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em><a href="https://d1baseball.com/columns/pro-organizations-making-college-pitching-coaches-top-priority/" target="_blank">https://d1baseball.com/columns/pro-organizations-making-college-pitching-coaches-top-priority/</a></em></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GTNavyNuke, post: 667995, member: 322"] Free article from D1 about how the MLB is trying to get college pitching coaches to come work for them. Not going well. The opposite of what Borrell did. Glad we got him!! Summary: [I]"College baseball has its advantages for many coaches. There’s more job security in most instances, the in-season life isn’t near as rigorous, and many of these coaches have lucrative financial deals in place. Saarloos is the highest paid pitching coach by a significant margin, Vanderbilt’s Scott Brown and LSU’s Alan Dunn make well north of $300K, Hobbs can get to $300K with incentives, and Yeskie left Oregon State for Arizona for a $60K pay increase, taking his overall salary to around $300K. Kenny, too, has a restructured deal with a salary more than $220K and with a three-year deal in place. In many cases, those salaries, outside of Hobbs, do not include sizable bonus structures. Fetter undoubtedly will get a well-deserved boost after the season the Wolverines had combined with the opportunities that have come his way this summer, too. There’s no doubt pro organizations, in most cases, have a treasure chest of money to offer pitching coaches at the college level. But for now, they either haven’t done so, or the coaches have turned down opportunities. There could be a point in time soon when pro organizations decide to overpay in order to entice coaches to leave the college game. But that time – yet – hasn’t arrived. College baseball hopes that trend continues. It’s a good place to be." [URL]https://d1baseball.com/columns/pro-organizations-making-college-pitching-coaches-top-priority/[/URL][/I] [/QUOTE]
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