Omari chose St. John's.
Omari would have been a very good player for us.
Omari ultimately was in a bad situation for Omari. If he stays he gets limited playing time at best on this team next season. Then if Lavin recruits over him and plays "his" guys then he's screwed again. The time for him to leave was now and it makes sense.
I'm disappointed but I'm also sympathetic. I wish him the best success he can possibly have and I hope he finds the place he is looking for
Dave I agree about all you said, but this type of stuff really bothers me with these guys and not just Omari. Why can't he beat those other guys out for minutes? I feel like all these guys at these schools go in with the expectation to be the man from day 1 and if it doesn't happen instead of working real hard to get minutes they just transfer somewhere else. I've respected Quincy Roberts for this kind of as he definitely should have left before this passed season with Hardy and Omari coming in. Omari had a complete clean slate with this coaching staff so it really should have been the best guys playing and I think we will see that. Just something that really ticks me off, but it is what it is I guess. I really liked Omari's game, but now I'm not sure he was really the guy I wanted here.
I agree with what you're saying. I understand I really do. I actually wrote Omari midseason touching upon some of this sympathizing with his situation but also urging him to work twice as hard as he already was.
I actually told him a personal story of mine. It was on a much smaller scale but it's something I learned at a very young age. I was a very gifted athlete as a young boy. I won two state championships in soccer, I played AAU basketball, and I was a very heralded baseball player.
In my town little league tryouts as a 10 year old, I might have had one of the best tryouts you could hope for. I fielded balls well, I showed off a very good arm, I hit the ball a ton, and I even layed down 2 perfect bunts in as many attempts. I wound up being the #4 overall pick.
Coming into the season a lot was expected of me. I started the season off pretty well getting into the lineup a bit but not as much as I wanted. A few games into the season during warm ups I dove for a ball which wound up hitting me in the face. I was immediately knocked out and wound up breaking my nose pretty badly. I missed the remainder of the season.
The next season I came back and wasn't the same player. I was very hesitant and my performance showed. League mandated I play 2 innings and get 1 at bat. So my coach, who was very very smart, started me so I'd be in the field, batted me 2nd to bunt to get my 1 AB out of the way as quick as possible, 1 more inning in the field, and have a great day.
My confidence was shot. I was frustrated because I knew I had more talent than other guys on my team but I wasn't getting a fair shot to prove that. I talked to my dad and he said I had to make the most of my opportunities. If I got 1 AB I needed to get a hit in that 1 AB. If I kept hitting I wouldn't sit.
Everyday after school my father would drive me to the high school and he'd throw me a bucket of balls sometimes two. We'd field balls after. The more and more I went the more comfortable I got.
I started hitting the ball and I started playing more. Eventually I played all game every game. I got the game winning hit to win the championship and made the all-star team. We beat TR East too that year although they beat us the following year to eventually win the LL World Series.
I saw adversity and did extra work to get ahead. I said to Omari I thought his situation was very similar to mine. He couldn't let the coach get the best of him and needed to do whatever he could to improve that much more. I never got a response from Omari after I sent that to him.
In the end I hope he learns from this and finds a better situation for himself. I do think his decision makes a lot of sense but like I stated previously I'm disappointed.