Championship Thinking in Sports – Connecting Dots: College Baseball after Serving in Iraq and Afghanistan
Guest Joey Falcone, Staten Island College right fielder, is very appreciative & thankful to his coaches & teammates for their supportive relationship on & off the field. He told me their support is a key for making baseball fun. And it has paid off! This year Joey earned conference Rookie-of-the-Year honors & a spot on the All-Star team. Prior to this student-athlete chapter of his life, Joey served tours of duty in Kuwait, Iraq & Afghanistan including combat missions as a Marine Corps medic. The essence of his job: keep wounded soldiers alive. This show explores Joey’s unconventional path to college & back to the baseball diamond. Tune is for a lively interview about moving onward, upward and outward. Topics host, Jim Meier, discusses with Joey are:
1. Comparing baseball competition to serving in a war zone
2. Joey the HS player and Joey the college player…what’s the same? What’s different?
3. The decision to not re-up and instead return to civilian life, school and baseball
4. The value of military discipline and training
In the spirit of transparency, I have this bias. When military personnel return to civilian life, once properly guided and mentored, they make excellent employees and entrepreneurs.
Podcast: Download
Tags: baseball coach, baseball in a warzone, baseball team, Championship Thinking in Sports, college baseball, Him Meier, how to make baseball fun, Jim Meier, joey falcone, joey falcone baseball, joey falcone military, joey falcone right field, joey falcone staten island college, making baseball fun, military baseball, military discipline in baseball, rookie of the year

