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Ian Kadish MLB Guest Blog: I Owe It All to Them…
Sunday January 22, 2012
Ian Kadish (Guest MLB Blogger): Once again, I was lucky enough to be asked back to write another blog post for MLB Reports! I always love being asked to write for them! This time they asked me to write about the biggest baseball influences in my life…and I’m warning you, this could take a while! I have been playing baseball for as long as I can remember, so obviously I am going to have many people that have influenced my baseball career. If I don’t mention you specifically, I am sorry, but the list is way too long and I have to pick the biggest influential people in my baseball career.
I am going to start by saying my parents are easily the single biggest influence in my life, whether it be on or off the field. They have molded me into the man (sometimes little kid) that I am today and I am a product of them. They have always supported me no matter what I do and they have always been there for me through thick and thin. They have been there for the hardest times and have somehow always gotten me through it. They have taught me to chase a childhood dream and put everything I have into it. They taught me to never give up, they taught me to work harder than anybody else, they taught me to play the game right, the list could go on for days of what they have taught me and I could never thank them enough. For that and everything else they have done for me, I owe it all to them. I love you Mom and Dad!
The second biggest influence in my baseball career is an easy choice. It is a guy named Mike Maundrell. He was my pitching coach when I played at Midland and started the molding process of the pitcher that I am today. He has taught me literally everything I know about pitching and is still teaching me today. I have known him since I was 16 and he completely changed me as a pitcher and as a person. He was the first coach I had who taught me what hard work really was and what I had to do to better myself. I still work with him to this day and I have been training with him this offseason here in Cincinnati. I can honestly say, I would not still be playing baseball if I had never met Coach Maundrell. He knows more about pitching than any human probably should know and he could talk about pitching for days on end. I am so thankful to have had the opportunity to work with him for several years and will forever be in debt to him for everything he has taught/ is teaching me about pitching.
Another big influence in my baseball career is Tim Adkins. He and I both will admit we had our tough times together, but he was the one that gave me the great opportunity to play collegiate baseball at Marshall University. He was the pitching coach at Marshall at the time and he pushed me to great lengths. He pushed me to the breaking point, but he made me as strong as I am today because he pushed me to such great lengths and found that breaking point. He was the one that truly found out what made me tick and what got me going. I learned so much from him not just on the baseball field, but off as well. He continued to teach me what hard work is and he taught me to find out what works for me. I owe him a tremendous amount of credit because he developed me into the hard worker that I am and taught me that if I want something to go get it and let nothing get in my way. Along with Coach Adkins, I owe Coach Waggoner a tremendous amount of credit as well. He was my head coach at Marshall University and he has always been there for me. He always told me if I ever need anything at all to call him and he would be there for my family and me. He genuinely cared about my family and me and I can’t stress enough how much I appreciate it. He always had confidence in me whether I was really good that day or extremely bad. He deserves a great amount of credit for how much he stood behind me and I thank him for that.
Coach Adkins departed from Marshall University after my Sophomore year and was replaced by Joe Renner. Coach Renner and Coach
Maundrell are like brothers and they both teach the same concepts. Coach Renner continued to teach me what Coach Maundrell taught me. Coach Renner and I grew to become extremely close in just 2 years. I feel like I can go to him with anything and talk about it and he will help me through it to the best of his ability. It was extremely sad to walk off the field after my last collegiate game and see tears in his eyes because it was the last game he would coach me in. It brought tears to my eyes and I will never forget the 2 years I worked with him. He worked extremely hard to get me to the next level and I am very thankful for everything he has done for me. I know we will remain in contact for years to come!
The last person that I want to mention who has been tremendously influential in my baseball career is Clarence Mitchell. He was my baseball coach when I was 13-15 years old and I am telling you what, he was the strictest coach I have ever had. He taught me the true meaning of discipline and made sure he engraved it in our heads. I still remember to this day taking a ground ball to the eye during infield practice and the eye swelling up instantly and bleeding profusely, but refusing to come out because of the discipline he preached or the running for hours on end if we messed up or did something the wrong way. He taught me what hustling is and I still to this day have everything he taught engraved into my baseball actions and life in general.
Other people that were influential in my baseball career include Chris Fiehrer (my high school coach), Scott Humes (Midland Coach), Jeff Newman (Midland Coach), and Bernie Barre, Although Bernie Barre wasn’t a baseball coach and had nothing to do with baseball, he taught me life lessons I can use on the baseball field. He was my football coach and was one of the best football coaches in the history of Ohio High School Football.
I also want to mention Dennis Holmberg. He was my very first professional baseball manager and he taught me so much more about the game of baseball that I never knew. I made sure I wrote down everything he taught me so it will be with me forever. He made my first professional season one that I will never forget.
I can’t begin to express how much I appreciate everybody that has had an influence on my baseball career. I owe them all a HUGE thank you and I would not be where I am today without them. I am so grateful for everybody that has influenced me so Thank You from the bottom of my heart! Ian
Thank you to Ian Kadish for preparing today’s MLB Guest Blog. Please feel free to contact Ian on Twitter (@BearJew36) or through his website (http://livinginthelifeofian.blogspot.com) for comments and questions. We also thank Ian for sharing the photographs used in today’s feature from his own private collection.
Previous Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog Entries on MLB reports:
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: Part 2 – Offseason and Expectations for 2012 October 3, 2011
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: Part 1 – Recap of My 2011 Season September 30, 2011
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: My Baseball Journey September 11, 2011
Please e-mail us at: MLBreports@gmail.com with any questions and feedback. You can follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook . To subscribe to our website and have the daily Reports sent directly to your inbox , click here and follow the link at the top of our homepage.
Ian Kadish MLB Guest Blog: Part 2 – Offseason and Expectations for 2012
Monday October 3, 2011
MLB reports: We welcome back Blue Jays prospect Ian Kadish to MLB reports. The right-handed pitcher pitched for the Bluefield Blue Jays in the Rookie Appalachian League in 2011. With a 2-3 record, 7 saves, 2.67 ERA, 1.154 WHIP, and 11/35 BB/K, the 23-year-old Kadish showed some very strong numbers pitching in the pen in his first professional season. With a bright baseball future ahead, we are proud to announce that Ian has agreed to become a regular MLB Guest Blogger on the Reports, describing his baseball journey for our readers. In his own words, we present part 2 of 2 of our featured guest blog of Ian Kadish, the offseason and his expections for the 2012 season:
Ian Kadish (Guest MLB Blogger): So MLB Reports asked me to do another blog entry because there was good feedback on the first one. This will be a 2-part entry, the first part looking back at my 2011 season and how it went and the second part will be about what my offseason will consist of and my expectations for 2012.
Part 2 – Offseason and Expectations for 2012
This offseason, I am back in Huntington, West Virginia. Marshall is located in Huntington and there are a few different reasons why I chose to come back even though I graduated last May. The biggest reason I chose to come back is due to the fact that I would have a great gym to train at for free. The Strength and Conditioning Coach that I had in college told me I could train there in the offseason for free if I wanted to. The pitching coach at Marshall also told me that I could come throw with him whenever I wanted/needed to. He offered to have somebody catch my bullpens when the time came and he also said I could face some hitters before I left for Spring Training, which will be a great help. That makes it so much easier for me rather than being at home because I would have to find a gym in Cincinnati and pay a monthly fee and more than likely the gym wouldn’t have everything I needed. I also would be scrambling to find somebody/somewhere to throw when the time came.
After a long college season, followed by another professional short-season, I gave my body a week off to recuperate from all the wear
and tear of the baseball season. This offseason, my plan is to hit the weight room hard in order to become bigger, faster, and stronger in a baseball pitching aspect. The Blue Jays gave everybody in the organization a big booklet with specific workouts in them. I have specific goals that I am wishing to achieve in the offseason. I also want to improve on my flaws not only in the weight room, but on the field as well. I am going to take time off from throwing to give my arm a rest, but not too long of a rest because I can’t use spring training as a time for my arm to get in shape. I need to go to spring training 100% ready to go…
Aside from training in the offseason, I got a job working at Dick’s Sporting Goods. It’s just like a Sports Authority or any other sporting good store like that. I wanted to get a job because I do not want to rely on my parents for everything. Many minor league players have to get a job in the offseason because not everybody signs a large signing bonus so it is not uncommon to get an offseason job. I am actually looking forward to it because it will keep me busy when I am not training.
My expectations are just like any other minor league player’s expectations. We all have goals we want to achieve and we all have dreams we want to come true. I’m no different. I am very hard on myself and push my body to great lengths, almost to failure because I know it will pay off during the season. The work I put in off the field will prepare me for every situation on field. There are specific expectations/goals that I have. Of course, one of them is to hopefully receive a promotion, but before I can do that I have to better myself. I’m going to work extremely hard this offseason, harder than I have ever worked because that’s all I know. I have worked extremely hard to get to this point and I am still not satisfied… I’m going to get after it and hopefully the hard work will pay off…
Thank you to Ian Kadish for preparing today’s MLB Guest Blog. Please feel free to contact Ian on Twitter (@BearJew36) or through his website (http://livinginthelifeofian.blogspot.com) for comments and questions. We also thank Ian for sharing the photographs used in today’s feature from his own private collection.
Previous Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog Entries on MLB reports:
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: Part 1 – Recap of My 2011 Season September 30, 2011
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: My Baseball Journey September 11, 2011
Please e-mail us at: MLBreports@gmail.com with any questions and feedback. You can follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook . To subscribe to our website and have the daily Reports sent directly to your inbox , click here and follow the link at the top of our homepage.
Ian Kadish MLB Guest Blog: Part 1 – Recap of My 2011 Season
Friday September 30, 2011
MLB reports: We welcome back Blue Jays prospect Ian Kadish to MLB reports. The right-handed pitcher pitched for the Bluefield Blue Jays in the Rookie Appalachian League in 2011. With a 2-3 record, 7 saves, 2.67 ERA, 1.154 WHIP, and 11/35 BB/K, the 23-year-old Kadish showed some very strong numbers pitching in the pen in his first professional season. With a bright baseball future ahead, we are proud to announce that Ian has agreed to become a regular MLB Guest Blogger on the Reports, describing his baseball journey for our readers. In his own words, we present part 1 of 2 of our featured guest blog of Ian Kadish, the recap of his 2011 season:
Ian Kadish (Guest MLB Blogger): So MLB Reports asked me to do another blog entry because there was good feedback on the first one. This will be a 2-part entry, the first part looking back at my 2011 season and how it went and the second part will be about what my offseason will consist of and my expectations for 2012.
Part 1 – A Look Back at the 2011 Season
In my opinion, the 2011 season had its ups and downs as well a learning curve, both personally and as a team. The Bluefield team made a great first impression and was a big hit (no pun intended). It was the Blue Jays first year in Bluefield after a 52 year existence of the Baltimore Oriole organization. We surely set the bar high for next year’s team. From what everybody said, the Oriole’s didn’t win much in Bluefield and the fans didn’t show much support because they weren’t winning. We brought a Division Championship to Bluefield in our first year, which the fans were ecstatic about, but what surprised the team was how into the Bluefield/Princeton rivalry the fans were. I’m telling you, these fans went nuts when we played the Princeton Rays. They sold out the stadium every game of the series because of the close proximity of the two teams (only about 15 minutes). The rivalry was for the Mercer Cup. It’s called the Mercer Cup because the two teams are located in Mercer County. The Blue Jays won the Mercer Cup this year and I honestly think the fans were happier we won the Mercer Cup rather than the Division Championship! Princeton had won the Mercer Cup the past several years and it’s about time it’s back in Bluefield. We made it all the way to the League Championship vs. the Johnson City Cardinals, but came up just short. They won the best of 3 series to capture their second league championship in a row.
The team was a great group of guys. Everybody got along and a big reason why we were so successful was due to our chemistry. Everybody pushed one
another and everybody picked each other up. We played as a team, just how our manager wanted us to play. He always said to put aside your personal goals and go after the team goals and your personal goals will follow. Our coaching staff was just as great. I can’t even begin to explain how much I learned from my manager. He taught me not only on the field, but off the field. I actually have a notebook full of quotes he said and lessons he would teach the team throughout the season. Now that I think of it, I still owe him a Marshall University clock and Montgomery Inn barbecue sauce (Montgomery Inn is a world-famous rib place in Cincinnati with the BEST barbecue sauce in the history of all barbecue sauces). He loves collecting clocks and has a great amount of them hanging in the locker room. I owe him a Marshall University one because I came into the locker room one day and saw a WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY clock hanging from a wall. Marshall and West Virginia are HUGE rivals and it’s either one or the other…he told me if I got him a Marshall clock he would get rid of the West Virginia clock.
I could go on and on with the stories, but overall the season was a successful one, and one that made me want more…Now that it’s the offseason, I can concentrate on what I need to improve on and prepare for a strong Spring Training and 2012 season…
Up Next: Part 2 – Offseason and Expectations for 2012
Thank you to Ian Kadish for preparing today’s MLB Guest Blog. Please feel free to contact Ian on Twitter (@BearJew36) or through his website (http://livinginthelifeofian.blogspot.com) for comments and questions. We also thank Ian for sharing the photographs used in today’s feature from his own private collection.
Previous Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog Entries on MLB reports:
Ian Kadish Guest MLB Blog: My Baseball Journey September 11, 2011
Please e-mail us at: MLBreports@gmail.com with any questions and feedback. You can follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook . To subscribe to our website and have the daily Reports sent directly to your inbox , click here and follow the link at the top of our homepage.
Ian Kadish MLB Guest Blog: My Baseball Journey
Sunday September 11, 2011
MLB reports: We welcome today on the Reports, Blue Jays prospect Ian Kadish. The right-handed pitcher pitched for the Bluefield Blue Jays in the Rookie Appalachian League in 2011. With a 2-3 record, 2.67 ERA, 1.154 WHIP, 11/35 BB/K, the 23-year-old Kadish showed some very strong numbers pitching in the pen in his first professional season. With a bright baseball future ahead, we invited Ian to prepare a MLB Guest Blog describing his baseball journey for our readers. In his own words, we proudly present the story of Ian Kadish- pitching prospect, Toronto Blue Jays:
Ian Kadish (Guest MLB Blogger): I was recently approached by MLB Reports to be featured on their website. We got together to come up with an idea of what to do and we decided on a blog post about the path I took to get to professional baseball. Most of you guys that are close to me probably know the story already, but here it is again for the ones who don’t…
I went to a small high school just North of Cincinnati, Wyoming High School. My graduating class was only 160 kids and football is the big thing there (Football is the big high school sport in Ohio). I actually thought I was going to play college football as a kicker. I thought I had a better chance at football than I did at baseball even though my childhood dream was to be a big league pitcher. I was not highly recruited for baseball and if it wasn’t for the summer program I played for, I would not have had the chance to play college baseball. I played for Midland Baseball and that is where I met one of the most influential coaches of my life, Mike Maundrell. Coach Maundrell taught me everything I know about pitching and taught me exactly what I needed to do to be successful. Midland is the best summer baseball program in the country and attracts kids from all over the country. There is a great number of major leaguers that have played for them and it was an unbelievable experience to be able to play for them. I learned more about baseball in those three years than I did at any point up until then. I committed to play baseball at Marshall University.
I spent four years at Marshall, earning my degree in Business Management with minors in marketing and entrepreneurship. In those four years, I learned a tremendous amount about baseball and life. I really think those four years prepared me for professional baseball because I lived on my own and learned how to deal with factors outside of baseball. I never really had great success in college baseball and at one point, I was ready to transfer out. My mom and dad are the only ones that know how many break downs I had because I was so frustrated. I was working harder than everybody and I was still not getting the results I wanted.
After my sophomore year, I went back home to play summer baseball in the Great Lakes League for the Cincinnati Steam. I went home because I needed to decide if I wanted to go back to Marshall or transfer somewhere else. That summer was the deciding factor because I got to spend time with my family and play with some very close friends that I had played with growing up. I went back to Marshall as a Junior and there was a new pitching coach. Joe Renner was a coach at Midland so I kind of knew him even though he was a new coach. I was very excited to work with him and after the summer I had, I was newly energized and ready to get back to work. I continued to work hard and ended up earning the Friday night starter role. This was a big jump for me because I had never started and the previous 2 years, I was pitching out of the bullpen. I struggled in the starter role and had again, another frustrating season.
After my Junior year, I went to play with the Rochester Honkers in the Northwoods League. Playing there was truly the best
experience for me since playing for Midland. All the guys on the team were great guys and we all became pretty close. The guys on the team taught me how to have fun with baseball again and relax. I was taking the game way too seriously and was not playing up to how I thought I should be playing because I was too uptight. Going into my senior season, the coaches wanted to put me in the closer’s role and I couldn’t have been happier. I embraced the role and told myself I was going to have more fun that year. Senior year turned out to be much more fun than the previous three years because I was more laid back. After my senior season, I went home to wait and see what would happen with the draft.
I won’t lie, I was hoping I was going to get drafted, but as day three approached, I was slowly beginning to think that I was not going to get a chance to play professional baseball and keep my dream alive. My dad and I went golfing on day three of the draft just to try to get my mind off of things, but I was still thinking about it. I was on my phone all day and when I learned that it was late in the draft and I still had not gotten picked yet, I began to talk with my dad about where I go from there. I did not know if I wanted to go to grad school or try to get a job in the real world. As soon as the draft was over, we were just finishing golfing and that’s when I got the call. Nick Manno, the area scout for the Blue Jays, called me and explained the situation to me. He said he knew that money did not matter to me and he knew that all I ever wanted was a chance to prove myself and play. He offered me a free agent contract and I gladly accepted! My dream was still alive, and I couldn’t have been happier!
From there, I was off to Florida for a mini-camp and to keep my dream alive, just like every other little 12-year-old, to be a big league pitcher…
Thank you to Ian Kadish for preparing today’s MLB Guest Blog. Please feel free to contact Ian on Twitter (@BearJew36) or through his website (http://livinginthelifeofian.blogspot.com) for comments and questions. We also thank Ian for sharing the photographs used in today’s feature from his own private collection.
Please e-mail us at: MLBreports@gmail.com with any questions and feedback. You can follow us on Twitter and become a fan on Facebook . To subscribe to our website and have the daily Reports sent directly to your inbox , click here and follow the link at the top of our homepage.



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