“You need to become your [own] best hitting coach… If I’m doing a good job as a coach, it’s helping you understand yourself.” -Tony Arnerich, Cleveland Guardians Bench Coach, on the Backpick Podcast
When evaluating your ability to succeed in baseball beyond raw skills like speed, arm strength, or hitting power, there’s one trait that often separates players who thrive from those who stall out: coachability. It’s frequently called the “6th tool” because it’s invisible on a stat sheet, but invaluable in development, recruiting, and team culture.
In this article we’ll define coachability exactly, explain why it matters so much, and show how you can become more coachable — both on and off the field.
What Does Coachability Really Mean?
Coachability is your willingness and ability to learn, adjust, and improve based on feedback from coaches — not just your physical tools or athletic ability.
A coachable player doesn’t just:
✔ Hear instruction — they apply it.✔ Take corrections personally — they respond positively.✔ Practice the same thing repeatedly — they improve at it.
Being coachable means having the right mindset to grow. It’s not about being perfect; it’s about being consistently teachable.
Why Coachability Matters in Baseball Recruiting
Most players focus on measurable tools:
Hitting mechanics
Pitching velocity
Speed / athleticism
Fielding range
Power metrics
But coaches see something deeper.
Teams recruit and develop players who can actually absorb coaching. In competitive environments — especially in college baseball — the ability to process feedback, make adjustments, and maintain confidence is what separates starters from bench players.
Coaches Look For:
🔹 Players who respond to corrections🔹 Athletes who ask thoughtful questions🔹 Young men who stay engaged after mistakes🔹 Competitors who adjust mid-game
This makes coachability a recruiting advantage — often more valuable than incremental improvements in any single physical skill.
How Coachability Impacts Your Game (More Than You Think)
Being coachable affects:
1. Your Development Curve
Coachable players learn faster and make fewer repeated mistakes.Coaches trust them with more responsibility.
2. Your Relationships With Coaches
Confidence is one thing — humility is another. Coaches want players who respect instruction and support team culture.
3. Your Mental Toughness
Coachability reduces frustration because teachable players view challenges as growth opportunities, not obstacles.
In essence, coachability is a foundational mindset that boosts everything else you do on the field.
5 Ways to Become More Coachable
If you want to raise your value as a player — and get more attention from coaches — work on becoming more coachable.
1. Develop a Growth Mindset
Instead of thinking:
“I already know how to do that”
Say:
“What can I learn from this?”
Ask better questions — not defensive ones.
2. Respond Positively to Feedback
Don’t tune out after criticism.Instead:
Repeat it back
Ask clarifying questions
Practice it immediately
This shows accountability.
3. Practice With Purpose
Coachable players don’t just show up — they engage.Move intentionally through drills, focus on implementing corrections, and track progress.
4. Stay Humble and Respectful
Even gifted players can struggle with ego.Great teammates choose progress over pride.
5. Communicate Clearly With Coaches
If you don’t understand something, ask — don’t guess.Communication builds trust and demonstrates maturity.
The Recruiting Edge: Coachability On Your Player Profile
When coaches evaluate you, they consider:
Does this player improve between evaluations?
Does he take instruction well?
Will he be easy to integrate into the team culture?
A player who shows growth, adaptability, and accountability is inherently more recruitable than one who doesn’t.
Many players have the physical tools — but not all have the mental tools to succeed long-term. Coachability is that missing piece.
Final Thoughts: Coachability Can Change Your Career
In baseball, talent gets your foot in the door. But coachability keeps the door open — and lets you walk through it every day.
Make coachability part of your game plan. It won’t just help you recruit better — it will help you be the best teammate and competitor you can be.

























