Determined Society with Shawn French | Adversity & Mindset - How Skip Bertman Built a Dynasty for LSU: Winning, Leadership, and Building Champions
Episode Date: May 18, 2026In this unforgettable episode of The Determined Society, Shawn French sits down with legendary LSU baseball coach Skip Bertman, alongside former LSU Tigers Ryan Theriot and Blair Barbier, for a powerf...ul conversation on leadership, character, culture, brotherhood, and building champions beyond the game. When Skip arrived at LSU, the program had no national championships, only a few hundred fans in the stands, and a culture still waiting to be built. Through vision, belief, discipline, and a commitment to high-character players, he helped turn LSU baseball into one of the greatest dynasties in college sports. Don't forget to get a copy of his book at https://www.skipbertman.net/tds But this conversation goes far beyond baseball. Shawn, Ryan, and Blair reflect on the lessons Coach Bertman instilled in them: believing before the world believes, putting team above self, building trust, visualizing success, and understanding that character wins long after the scoreboard fades. This episode talks about: • How Skip Bertman transformed LSU baseball • Why character matters more than talent alone • The leadership principles behind championship culture • The power of visualization and belief • How great teams police themselves • Why “everything matters” in sports, business, and life • The brotherhood and legacy of LSU baseball • How Skip Bertman built men beyond the game This is not just a baseball episode. This is a conversation about leadership, family, legacy, and becoming the kind of person others can trust when it matters most. The Determined Society is hosted by Shawn French — a show for people who refuse to quit. Every episode goes beyond the highlight reel to explore the real stories behind resilience, reinvention, and the relentless pursuit of a life built on your own terms. Subscribe on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and all others.. If this episode moved you, share it with someone who needs to hear it — and leave a review. It helps more than you know. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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You don't have to make the big leagues to succeed.
You can be successful in your business, touch other people's lives,
and do things that you've learned to do.
And as Ryan said, put it into the business.
You can't run your business if you don't know how to be a good team.
You have to come up with the concept that you're part of an organization,
and you have to do your part.
And you have to root for the other guys to do their part as well.
In 1983, Louisiana State University put an ad in the paper for a new head baseball coach.
This man with me today responded to the ad.
The Louisiana State University had zero championships.
No one believed, but this man to my right, Skip Burtman came along and instilled culture.
After everything that you've been through, everything you accomplished in your life,
what does two determination mean to you?
In 1983, Louisiana State University put an ad in the paper for
a new head baseball coach.
And this man with me today responded to the ad.
And the Louisiana State University had zero championships,
200 people in the stands,
all there just to wait until the football season.
They didn't even understand what baseball was here in Louisiana.
The loudspeaker was busted.
No one believed.
But this man to my right, Skip Burtman came along
and instilled culture and belief,
not only into the institution of LSU,
but into the community of Baton Rouge
and the state of Louisiana
and the world of college baseball.
He has built many men of leaders like myself,
Blair Barbier to my right,
Ryan Terrio to my left,
and so many other thousands of men
have benefited from being in this man's presence.
I cannot tell you how special today's episode is.
18 years at L.A.
you, five national championships, seven SEC titles, 11 college world series appearances.
And he's built men. But the most important thing, other than the baseball, is what he's done
in the community, what he's done for everybody's life. So without further ado, Skip Burtman, my mentor,
my baseball coach, our baseball coach. Welcome to the Determin Society. Thank you. Thank you. That's very
nice of you. I mean, the whole time I'm trying not to cry here, man. I'm like, you know,
I'm sitting here, guys, and I'm going over everything, and, you know, just being back here in
Louisiana is just so emotional for me.
I brought my son, and just thinking about being on camera with you made me so emotional because
without you, I'm not where I'm at.
Oh, that's nice to hear.
You know, you're so talented.
You're going to be where you want to be.
Thank you, coach.
You know, it's early on, though, right, guys?
You know, you get into this program of LSU, and you think you're just going.
for baseball, you know, but this man teaches you so much more about being a teammate,
being a human being, and more so about leadership. But before we get there, take me back to the
young boy, Skip Burtman, you know, living in Miami and sitting there with your coach at 15 years
old, what was his name? Sapper. Max Sapper. And he taught you more about baseball than most
coaches ever learned. What made him so different? He was a former professional ball player who studied
the game quite a bit. He lived very close to Flamingo Park where we played. So he was always there
and the chance for us to talk to him. He taught me a lot of things that I use for Ryan and Blair
and things that I'm using today. So I had a,
great start.
I was, gee, this
hope this doesn't sound wrong.
I was lucky enough to be
prepared to be
a coach. And then at the University of
Miami, I
had a good opportunity with a good head coach
Ron Frazier.
And so when I came to LSU,
I really,
you know, was trained a lot.
And of course, you got to recruit
the right guys.
You got to have good players.
You can't win.
and people like these two were great players.
And I was at an affair last night at Jeremy Moore's house,
and there were 10 guys.
Good character people.
That's how it was done.
If you don't get the good character kids, it's tough to win.
You know, it's interesting because we talk about the leadership style of Skip Burtman, right?
So I want to hear from you, Blair and you, Ryan, you know, what was the thing that stuck out most to you guys of his leadership that made everybody just understand that the first step is believing in yourself, you know, and creating such amazing experiences while you both were here.
Yeah.
You know, honestly, I feel like today, like I won the lottery hitting the plate for this guy, right?
I mean, it's that good when you look back at all the things.
And I go back to, like you said,
it's way more than just the baseball coach.
Like we went in there and we're talking about success
and we've got the Sunday successful speaker series
and we're hearing from CEOs of massive companies
and he's calling in favors to get them to come talk to us.
Never about baseball.
And in talking with them,
you know,
I know that he was grinding to make us better people,
better, you know, a better person.
that way he could trust us more.
We could trust each other more.
And he taught us all these little nuances in life
that can help you to be successful.
And that has nothing to do with baseball.
Yeah, see, we talked about hitting
and we did some things.
We did.
But it was really about that.
That was the motivation, the leadership that he had.
And again, it's really why I feel like I won the lottery
to learn a lot of these things
that started with Max Sapper
and through Ron Frazier
and it kept going, and he was nice enough, loved us enough to share that stuff with us, you know, and amazing.
I love that, man. Right now.
Yeah, I mean, you know, I'm sitting here listening to Blair, no offense.
I'm trying to think of one, like, baseball point that I remember from the greatest college baseball coach of all time.
Honestly, I can't. I'm trying to.
But what comes to my brain is everything that Blair just said, and it was from day one.
You know, coach said something that I think is just so important and not only in sports, but also in life and in business.
And he said the word culture and character, you know, and getting into the living rooms of folks and understanding what makes somebody tick.
I mean, that's a hard thing to do.
Like to learn about the players is hard.
Lazy coaches or leaders have a set way that they do things.
You know, lazy, and they may not be lazy people,
but they're just lazy in that aspect of leading men.
One thing that Coach Burtman did was would understand the person,
what made them tick, like what they liked.
I was this kid from Broadmoor that didn't have a whole lot.
well, he let me wear his Rolex one night.
I don't know if he remembers that.
I did.
I wore his Rolex out to the bar one night.
I sure did.
Coach.
But he just knew kind of, you know, he would take time to get to know everybody and what made
him go.
And, you know, that's really what sticks out most right now.
I was listening to Blair.
I'm like, yeah, you know what?
Like, did he give me like a tip to help me hit?
No.
I don't really, you know, but man, that's that's so much more.
It's so funny because I, every time I talk about what I've built and when my wife asked me,
you know, tell me about skip and tell me about your mindset.
See, back in the 80s, when someone told you to lay down on the ground in the locker room
of the College World Series and visualize being there, people thought it was a little cuckoo.
But now today it's called sports psychology, right?
And it's something that has built me.
It's something that I have sat there when I was recording the show in my car,
thinking about what's next and feeling it and visualizing it and the quote that he always said, right?
And I feel so deeply that the quote, you know, I want one of you guys.
Maybe even skip, man.
You want to say the quotes so the audience can hear it?
Yeah.
Let me do just before Ryan, much something about how it begins.
again so did you do you too in 1984 when it first began and there were three four five hundred
people at the ball yard and I hear things like hey slip blurtchman yeah slip we need one more
point you see yeah and one by one is there runs you know not points and you get a lot of this
hey, referee, you stink.
You know, it's all football.
Yeah.
You know at LSU.
And people like this are so strong, like Ryan and Blair,
are such strong people with great family.
Mom and Dad, great.
And they were able to do things besides play great baseball,
as both of them did.
And of course,
some went to the big leagues like rhino and uh others are super successful you know business guy you
know like blare and they did things like blair paid second base in his first time out what year was
97 yeah it was a long time ago it was we're all getting gray except brian teara i think he's
dyeing his hair.
I know.
Hey, listen.
I mean, I don't know.
I got some grace.
Okay.
Okay.
I just keep it real short.
No, the guys,
they're great.
And I can remember Blair played
second base.
Yeah.
When he was a freshman,
I go to him and I said,
Blair, we need you third base.
I can put this other guy
as second, but he can't
play third.
Blair.
They move right over.
Rino, of course, played as a freshman.
I mean, he, you know, he was so good.
But both of them were fun.
Both of them were excellent players.
But both of them had fun and delivers fun to the clubhouse to the other people.
I know. I've been in the clubhouse with this guy before.
I know what goes on.
I know what goes on.
Never got the chance to be.
with you in the club.
No, I wish we could have.
That would have been fun, man.
No doubt about it.
I came the year after you won the Natty and you were gone.
Yeah.
But that's the thing.
Again, you know, coach, there was so much fun, but there was so much work.
But because of what you created through your leadership, we all loved every minute of it.
We loved each other.
We loved being with each other.
And that's something that I don't think any, I don't want to say any other college coach
on the planet, because that would be unfair.
But very few have been able to do.
Yeah.
The first thing that was on my mind after coaching the team that was here with Jack LaMabe and I had them all him.
LeMabe had him the year before and then I had them.
We did okay.
But one of the things that I really look for in order to win is high Karen.
kids.
And, of course, they have to play, but high character kids.
And these two are perfect examples, you know, of kids that can team be part of a team
that can reach out to someone who needs help to be better on the team.
Not to mention their skill level to reach out to help others without, you know, sounding bossy.
they were they were two of the greatest these happen to be two of the greatest that played for me
and it was a lot of fun i mean rhino was a lot of fun blur it's a lot of fun and i tell you
blare you're dead well i mean what a great guy i mean the parents were very nice i enjoyed talking
to them and uh it was um
It was fun for me to get going, you know, on this thing.
He created the best atmosphere for our family, for us.
I don't ever really remember, Ryan.
You remember rules?
You remember curfew checks?
Absolutely.
No, we did what we were supposed to do sort of thing.
He trusted us to do that.
We had some guiding principles, right?
Hey, this is what is expected of you.
But let's have some fun.
Let's let it rip.
And that was my favorite part.
We could have fun.
And he would talk to us about letting it rip.
Like we didn't come to Omaha to hold them up at third.
And that works for us in business.
Like we didn't come here to sort of just play, you know?
And it was some of my, we got to have fun and we got to let it fly.
Well, to your point, though, like, that does not work if you don't have the right folks in the room.
You know, the whole, if it ever escalated up to his office, like, we were done.
that team doesn't win right and and you know it's funny Blair's sitting right there like like
there there was always a guiding presence in the clubhouse in the locker room that you don't
need a curfew because if you don't take care of your business that'll be handled in the clubhouse
right and it would never get to his office and and there was a hierarchy there and and you know
I'm not going to sit here and get on my soapbox about college sports now and how that's a hard thing to
create, but I will say that, you know, once you start that cycle and recruiting those types of
kids, the clubhouse and or the boardroom polices itself.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
And, you know, if it ever escalates up, it's, you know.
There might have been one time it got to his office, maybe Doug Thompson, Trey McClure,
myself involved in a, in a food fight.
In a food fight?
In the union?
In the club, you know, probably shouldn't have happened.
Was it in the clubhouse or was it in the union?
No, it was in the clubhouse.
It was in the clubhouse.
Like a real food fight?
Yeah.
People do that?
Maybe Momor grow.
Yeah, I mean, it got, it got, it got, it got, it got in tents.
Were you just having fun or were you like piss?
We were having fun probably went a little, little past the guiding principle thing, you know.
You know, so we had to pay for that one.
Okay.
But, you know, so it went, you know, every now and then it made it out.
You know, I got a funny story.
And it was the year that I was with you in 2001.
I think what happened is I think Southern beat us.
Oh, yeah.
And remember they ran to center field and they slid on their knees
and they went like this to our flags.
Yeah, yeah.
And then Skip goes, ooh, see you at 6.30 tomorrow morning.
And I'm like, I don't know who I was talking to.
But I was like, what's that mean?
And they're like, don't eat.
Don't eat.
Look, and then they asked us.
And then we gave them our back.
I don't know if you remember that.
Like, they were like, yeah.
Like, they came, they beat.
They needed bats, I guess, to finish the year out.
Yeah.
And coach is like, all right, boys, go get your bats and give it to them.
Like, wait, what?
I don't remember that.
Oh, yes, sir.
Okay.
I don't remember that.
I remember the next morning, though, was the worst morning on my life.
Yeah.
It was bad.
Some bear crawls and some, you know, things of that nature, no doubt.
Some rolls.
Oh, my goodness.
And some, all that, yeah, it was, that was treacherous.
Well, that only happened once.
To me, a croo.
That's enough.
That was definitely.
Definitely enough.
You know, it's one of those things that we,
so many stories because of this man.
You know, Doug Thompson, and thank you, Doug and Coach Dealey for setting this up.
And, you know, he told me a story yesterday about the 2000 comeback, right,
in that game against Stanford.
You came in, the dugout, and you're like, nobody believes we're going to win this game.
So grind it out, buck up, and we're going to eff and win this thing.
and someone's like,
yo,
you know,
Blair,
you got to go hit
because I wasn't in the dugout.
I was sitting in my friend's living room at that time,
you know,
watching it just like sweating
and wanting this to happen
and you sprint up to the plate.
This man has a 13 pitch-out-out-batch bat
and then blows the ball out of the yard.
Good memory.
Good memory.
Long time ago.
Unbelievable.
Blows a ball out of the yard.
It goes back to that quote.
Say it.
That you were referenced.
And, you know,
if you,
if you.
Anything you could vividly imagine.
ardently desire, sincerely believe, enthusiastically act upon must, absolutely must come to
us.
That's the foundation.
I mean, hair on in, man.
And that's the inspiration for that.
That's why.
Yeah.
You man, taught me this, look, we're in dire straits right now.
Yeah.
You know, and.
What, that the eighth inning?
Yeah, I think it was the eighth inning.
Yeah.
And it was a gloomy day.
And, you know, Stan, you know, they had the momentum.
him and the pitcher was cutting us up and it was wayne on the mount at that point it was wayne
on the mount at that point just uh jason young if they would have left the other guy in we
wouldn't be talking about that that's right that's right jason but both shoving yeah we never saw
two guys no in the first round come on crazy the kids are so at the time you know that that happened
the kids were so tough mentally i don't mean i did that
I mean, their parents did that.
No, you did that.
And they did that.
They watched other kids and their toughness.
And pretty soon, people like Blair and Rhino were the leaders.
And other kids picked up on that.
So I didn't have to talk to every single kid, 101.
You know, they did it because of who they were.
And I'm very, very proud, not just because Rhino slid in,
with the winning run, you know, or Blair got a, gave that speech that really made a difference
against Stanford all the time.
They were great kids.
They did well in school.
There was never a problem of any kind with the kids, which is important to me.
You know, I didn't want to hear about a bad, some teacher sent me a note about a bad kid.
I just didn't like that.
very rarely happened and uh i always said i want high character kids to smoke you know the coach that
helped recruit at the time give me high character kids and we the high character kids won for us
and if we didn't have that we struggled yeah some more don't you love his humility
Yeah. I mean, is it? Are we really? Are you really? I, coach, I mean that with all respect. It's, you know, say, you got, no, you did this for us.
That's the truth. Well, I mean, and it was just, it's still so apparent. I use this every day with my companies, the folks I interact with, my family.
you know, number one, and there's a few principles that I learned directly from him that,
that have allowed me to continue to have success after baseball, right?
Which is a hard transition.
Oh, dude.
You know, when you've tried to hit a curveball your entire life,
and all of a sudden you're not trying to hit a curveball anymore,
then what, now what?
You know, we all deal with that, right?
And so, so number one, and I learned this directly from coach.
coach was, you know, the game itself can't define you. Like, that can't be at the core of who you are.
It has to be something greater and bigger than that. And, and, you know, baseball is so hard to where
if you take your eye off the ball, and truthfully, I wasn't good enough to take my eye off the
ball. But if you, if you, if you do that, somebody's going to take your job, especially in
pro ball. I mean, the second you let your foot off the gas pedal, here comes another guy. And so,
And so if you, if that's your identity, you're going to be disappointed every time.
Yeah.
Every single time.
And then one day the game forget you.
And then that's who you are.
And then you're miserable, right?
So the guiding principle, and I think it equates into winning, whatever that may be that you determine in your life is winning is Blair kind of touched on it and coach danced around it.
But it's, and I tell my people this all the time.
you have to want your teammate or your locker mate or your office mate to succeed more than you want yourself to succeed.
You have to love them more than you love yourself in moments.
I have to want Blair to get the big hit more than I want the big hit.
I can't tell you how many times I stood on top of the dugout or even in pro ball with Fontno when we were playing together.
And I wanted him to have that moment more than I wanted myself.
to because I knew he needed it, you know, or I wanted him, I just wanted him to have it,
because I loved him. Yeah. And you take the, and he would talk about that a lot. You know,
you have to really love those guys. I mean, generally love him. Do you want to win? Do you want to
have success? But those principles, the loving your teammates so much, and then also not having
that one pitch or that one game define you as a human, you take that and transition it into the business
world, which I'm working on every day.
Not great at it yet, but I'm trying.
I hear you on that one, bro. Yeah.
I'll tell you, it's a thought.
You're unstoppable.
Yeah.
You're, I mean, it is.
Because now I don't have to rely on a general manager to say if I'm good or not.
Now it's on my shoulders.
Everybody looks for a cheat code, the silver bullet code.
And what people don't realize is he gave it to a little time ago.
It's do the dang work.
That's right.
Love your teammate.
Love your coworker.
Love your family.
Love the people in your life.
And focus on that.
The results come, but don't focus on them.
And don't let them define you.
The recruiters, whether, well, you don't need any names.
But I told all the people who recruited,
that was a lot of different people,
is the kid high-level character.
I don't know.
I just saw him play center field.
Well, you got to find out.
You know, is he the president or some club in the school, but his grades?
What does he do after school?
Mom and dad watch him at the park, or does he stay in?
Because those are the guys that win.
Yeah.
But that's what's special.
It is.
Because, Larry, and you know this, most recruiters and head coaches aren't thinking of that.
What's he run the 60 in?
Right.
What's the exit velo?
Right.
Right? What's the
the launch angle now
and what's all this stuff?
Those potentially can be big moments in games,
but they don't win championships.
Fortunately, we didn't have those things.
Yeah, thank goodness. Thank goodness.
Yeah, really.
I didn't. I didn't have it.
I've been to LSU recently in Jay Johnson,
magnificent coach.
Yep.
and I'm watching in the clubhouse, and of course, television sets set on the wall.
The guy pitches a ball tells you how much it rotated.
Oh, the spin rate?
Yeah.
Oh, the spin rate.
You know, how fast, of course, it was, and what location it had.
And I thought, well, I don't think that's going to do it for us.
And besides, I thought I could see that, you know, with the kids.
And when you match that with the character of the kids, and like Ryan said, everybody wanted everybody else, like Blair said, everybody wants everybody else to be successful.
They don't talk about themselves.
It was a super team effort every year, but it took time.
Yeah.
Per it to happen.
When I started, boys in 1984.
I saw me, God, I heard a guy yell, hey, Bertram, you know, we're one point down.
Let's go.
Yeah, all the time.
Football.
Yeah.
You know, it's funny because you look back at that, and I want to touch on a very important point of you being the visionary that you are.
You have the big yellow pad, right?
And you had every goal, every improvement, every vision, every championship mapped out.
And you sat with your coaches on the.
mound, what were their reaction to that list at that time?
It was at the beginning.
It was hard for them.
They, you know, you can't do this and they can't do it in their businesses, you know,
with two, three ball games, you know, when you go to that mound, you know, it has to be
a long period of time, you know, for the baseball season.
And while there might be mistakes made, say, by me,
regarding they accept that.
I accept their mistakes.
And we all want the same thing.
It isn't just to win.
I've been fortunate.
All the teams I've ever had have won.
But I've had great kids, high character people like these two.
Fathers involved in the program.
See, I enjoyed parents, you know, coming by,
Most coaches don't.
It's a wonderful thing.
At LSU, Ryan and Fontenau, it's amazing to watch them play.
And then one day you pick up and they're playing.
I go, actually, go into the ball game.
Yeah.
And they're playing together in the big leagues.
I don't think I don't know how many people have done that, but I was super.
And we went out for steak.
and it was wonderful.
So it's nice when they succeed.
Rightfully so.
It's wonderful when they succeed.
But you don't have to make the big leagues to succeed.
You can be successful in your business,
touch other people's lives,
and do things that you've learned to do.
And as Ryan said, put it into the business.
You know, you talked about that yellow pad.
Yeah.
And you talked about that coach's hit culture four or five times.
Like from 84, like what year did you go?
Did you ever go, okay, it's rolling now?
You know what I mean?
Well, in 86, we went through the World Series, first time ever for LSU.
So that wasn't it.
But we went back in 87.
And while we didn't win, as you know, it takes time.
I got to learn that.
And we went back in 87.
That helped us.
It also showed the fans that if you're really good, you go to Omaha for the national championship.
And then, of course, all of a sudden our fans were so terrific.
We had the most people in the stands, you know, for fans.
You know, I feel like we're at that point, you know, you go back to 86.
you go back to 870,
he certainly talks about it in the book.
It's when this hold the rope thing
starts to take hold.
By the time we got there,
we were getting crystal balls.
And if the ball broke and our trust broke,
but it was all about trust.
And that yellow sheet in my mind
started to create,
coach would talk about our synergy all the time,
his best nine, not the nine best.
And that to me was the,
the cornerstone, the quote,
the cornerstone was the synergy
that started to be built.
Our two plus two
equaled way more than four.
Certainly not four and certainly not
less than four.
Way more than four. And it started in my mind
with that page.
Little boys, this is where we're
going to start. We're going to put one foot
in front and next and to kind of
come be part of this thing.
There's a trust factor that
you have to bring to the table.
otherwise we'll police it he can police it whatever it is but you got to be into the you got to be
within the ball of trust by the time we got there or when he threw the rope over and said who would
you have hold it right yeah and then you realize like being part of this team this community this
family is different because it comes with some um you're gonna have to bring some stuff to the table
it's going to come with a little bit of responsibility to be a bit of pressure right
Of it.
Did you know it was going to work like that?
Say that?
Did you know that it was going to work like that?
Like, you know, was there ever a, you ever go, man, I sure hope I'm right.
Let me say this.
Be careful.
In high school, team one in junior college.
Of course, the University of Miami.
And at LSU was tough in 83, 84, 85.
You know, they didn't know how.
Some of them were recruits before I got there.
And it was tough for me because they weren't the kind of kids that I would recruit.
And then it got a little bit better in 80.
So 84 and first year in 86, which is fast.
We went to Omaha.
That was the first time anybody from Baton Rouge ever went to Omaha.
And then by the end,
thousands of people went to Omaha.
And thousands of people appreciated the character and the play of, say, these two guys.
They, but they, they could sense the teamsmanship, people who stands.
They could sense the quality of their personality, what mom and dad did.
You know, everybody looks around and can.
sense that so if rhino goes to speak somewhere or blair you know everybody thinks they're
originally they think they're going to get a football player so but baseball players are
mom and dad set them up they were playing since they were what eight years old earlier earlier
it starts so early but you know the thing about it is you know we keep going back to the list
of everything we have all created because of him, because of his vision.
See, he visualized and saw the grandstands.
He saw the people down left field line.
He saw people down the right field line.
He saw the national championships.
And so when I started my business and when y'all started your businesses, I'm pretty
damn sure you guys wrote the stuff down and said, this is exactly where I'm going to be in
five, ten years.
And only the people that believe in this,
Only the people that can subscribe to this vision can be here.
Because if not, you can't win with you.
I love which.
I so love that.
The only thing I would add to that is that he told us to that there are going to be dream busters along the way.
Oh, yeah.
There's going to be people that tell you you can't.
Oh, dude.
And they're going to come out of the woodwork.
Every turn, bro.
Every turn.
Every turn.
And you got to be tough enough.
You got to be courageous enough to believe that you can.
To believe that we can because it doesn't matter.
whether we were playing baseball at LSU, we're working,
we're all working, every day somebody's going to tell you
that what you want to do and what you think you can do,
you can't do that for some reason.
And it's just not true.
He allowed us to bust through those mental barriers.
Tell us about Roger Bannister.
Oh, the first guy under four minutes in a mile on a balmy day in England.
I can remember the story.
So it's so good.
And it just, it lets you know that it's up to you.
Yeah.
It's up to you.
You know, it's funny because if I had a dollar,
every time someone laughed at me for starting this and doing this,
I'd have a lot of freaking dollars.
I probably wouldn't have to do anything anymore.
I don't remember this.
You could give us some.
I'm sure you go.
We mean if I remember it.
I was at Alec Box.
It was one of my favorite interviews, dude,
because I got to sit there with somebody that I respect as a friend of mine
and have a conversation.
And now we're doing it in person again, you know, for this time.
But, man, of course I remember that.
From then until now, this is awesome.
Dude, it's been nuts.
It's amazing.
It's been nuts.
But you've always supported me.
We don't talk all the time.
But, you know, you'll pop in every night again and go, you're stud.
I love you.
I'm like, dang, man, there's my guy.
But again, again, I want to stress this.
It's because of him.
Amen.
It's because of him.
Because Doug Thompson and I were talking yesterday at his office.
He goes, some of my best friends are LSU players from 5 to 10 years younger than me.
or five to ten years older than me.
And the thing of the matter is like,
I never play with you, right?
I play with him for a year, but I was hurt.
Doug Thompson yesterday,
first time conversation in person.
My son thought we knew each other for 20 years.
That's good.
Because it's the brotherhood.
It's a family.
It's different.
And that, in those skills,
and I want the audience to really check in on this,
whether you're running a business, running a family, doing something.
Like, I don't care what is your salesperson.
These principles of leadership apply.
Like, you can build this in your own life.
That's why this book, you know, everything in baseball matters is much more than baseball.
Absolutely.
Skip Burtman is more than baseball.
What?
That book is sitting, no doubt.
That book is sitting on my, it's sitting on my coffee table in my office.
I've got, I've got one book sitting.
sitting right there. And when people come and meet at my office, I don't sit behind the desk
because I think that's cheesy. We could do the couch and we do the chair thing. Yeah, come on.
And so that question's asked all the time. What is that? What does that mean? Like, everything
matter. Like, what is I'm like, and I look, I'm like, everything matters. Everything. Like,
literally, everything matters, you know, and you take that book right there and you can apply that
to any aspect of your life.
Yeah.
And I promise you're going to sit there and go, oh,
you may not be able to hit a curveball
or know how to go first to third,
but, dude, it's good.
All I know is if you run a team,
whether you're a coach, an athletic director,
or you're like me and own a business,
you better buy that book for your people.
Yeah, yeah.
So every one of my people in my company
are getting that book.
Yeah.
My son is getting that book.
my production team is getting that book.
Everybody who supports this show is getting that book on my dime.
Because here's why.
If you're going to be involved in this,
then you need to understand where it came from.
You have to.
Here, here.
It all applies.
Yeah.
It goes back to what we were talking about earlier.
I mean, all of the success at LSU had very little to do
with him saying,
this is how you hold a curveball,
or this is how you do this.
Well said.
It just didn't.
It had more to do with things that he talks about.
And that's why I say I got to listen to him narrate that book in essence for four years.
I mean, when you talk about day in, day out, elevated on game days with the motivation.
I mean, but it always came back down to these things that mattered in life and not about if we're going to be, you know, Georgia.
On Friday night at 7 o'clock.
You know, one of my favorite moments with him,
and I don't even know if you remember this,
but I remember going into his office
and saying, coach, I'm done.
You know, I got to have surgery.
It hurt to even shift gears in my car.
Yeah, we had manual transmissions back then.
I would dating ourselves a little bit.
It hurts so bad, and he goes,
are you sure?
You're going to play this year.
It's your first year here.
You and Matt Heath are going to split time.
I'm like, coach, I can't even throw the ball back to the pitcher at this point.
What he doesn't remember is probably that conversation,
but a week before he asked me on the loudspeaker, ooh, what happened?
Did you get in a car accident?
Yeah, I know.
And I'm like, ooh, I made it.
Oh, yeah.
I made it.
This shit's running deep.
But I remember that conversation.
And I think the biggest pain in life is the pain of regret.
And I hold regret in that moment.
because I should have said, you know what?
Screw it.
Screw it.
It's going to hurt like hell.
Maybe I sit next year out.
But at least I'm on the field for this man's last year.
But for some reason, there was something in my mind that was just telling me that I couldn't.
And so I say I should have said that.
But if I didn't handle that moment like I did then, I don't think I'm where I'm at now because that drives me.
Do you remember that?
Yeah.
You remember that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
In your office at the last athletic building.
By the way, I don't made to jump in here.
Last night, it was a Jeremy Moore's house.
You know, one of our, another one of our great people.
Today at 4.30, we have a reunion.
And the 96th team, 30 years can be honored and walk in the field.
But we hope that everybody.
come at 4.30, whether you played 96 or not, and see if we can get all the people together.
I wished to God there were some kind of test that all the people could take to see how successful they are,
how wonderful their family is, you know, how the baseball, I don't mean me, the baseball participation at
that high level.
And you handle it.
They handled it.
And now as businessmen,
they handle that too.
And I'm not saying that, certainly it was me.
It's the idea they played
national championship type baseball,
whether we won or not.
And they knew how to be a good team.
And you can't run your business
if you don't know how to be.
a good team. Yeah, but that's the thing that we keep talking about and going back to is what you
built is much more than baseball. You know, you, you taught us how to be good husbands. Yes.
Amazing fathers. Portner-be. You know, that's what I get emotional about. Friends. Yeah.
I mean, you know, all that stuff is, yeah. Like, I can think of many people that played in big college
baseball programs. They don't have what we have. And I'm not talking about the eight national titles.
I'm talking about the family.
The brotherhood, you know, it's just this connection within this community wasn't there before this man stepped in this area.
That's right.
And the tentacles go much further, too.
I mean, you know, we talk about the greatest college football coach of all time is who?
Is who?
Football, right.
Yeah.
And where do you think Sabin sat and talked and listened and learned?
And, you know, there's so much of that.
we talk, you know, the people I don't think really think about a lot.
That's an amazing point, right?
Because what most people don't understand is when he retired from baseball,
he went to athletic director.
That's right.
And then he was Nick Saban's mentor.
And all of a sudden, right, Nikki leaves, he goes and coaches pro,
and then he goes to Alabama, and he becomes the greatest football coach of all time.
And everybody credits it to Nick Saban.
created this culture that even one blade of grass out of whack has to matter to everybody.
Even the janitor, even the person in the press box.
Where did that come from?
You know why he's awesome?
He did that for even the smaller sports.
He brought those coaches in.
All of these programs shot through the roof because they got to spend time with him.
He didn't just go football.
He didn't just go basketball.
ball. He spent time with the women's sports, the other men's sports, and brought the entire
athletic department along for the journey. And again, Ryan touched on it earlier. You know, he knew
how to talk to each individual differently. He talked to me different than Ryan, different than this
one or different than that one. He did that in the athletic department too, and that's why you
saw that spike. And it's intentional. And we've been on a run since, I would argue.
It's intentional leadership. It's leading with intent. It's, it's understanding the folks around
you what makes some tick but it but it's you know you're talking leadership but but there's you know
there's good leaders and then there's intentional leaders that that that really take the time
to dive into into those people it's not just sports either no yeah like this is
transitional no it's it's personal you know it's it's a very personal thing and i'm gonna bring up
something right now that might make us all a little bit you know emotional in 1984 skip you
gave your college world series lapel pin to a young boy.
15 years later, you recruited him.
He won a national championship.
Wally Pawnaf, Jr.
And our brother passed away at 22 in his sleep.
And you gave the eulogy.
How do you hold that?
You know, I've just said this high character young man that play baseball come.
Those are the ones I want.
Not so much.
how fast or how deep they can hit.
All right, that worked for me.
But it also worked for you.
And I mean on your own with your parents, I don't mean I did it.
And that's how you got by.
So it can be learned on your own.
It can be watching others, you know,
and picking the best points from each person.
and then you become leaders with businesses like you three.
And I'm not saying it couldn't be done without sports,
but sports help.
It parallels life and business so much.
And that was just, you know, the thing, you know, about, you know,
our boy, Wally was, you know, it was just indicative of your leadership
and what you created.
There's no mistakes in this world.
world, that impact on that four-year-old boy at that moment, it said, I'm going to LSU.
It was in his body, he's from Mattary.
He wanted to come here.
No doubt.
Hey, when he was in the womb, he was probably already, you know, chant the fight song, right?
But the thing is, the thing is, most services don't have their college coach.
Yeah.
Give the eulogy.
That is, that is speaking so highly of what you created here, you know.
And I didn't want to have this.
conversation without touching on that.
Because I want the audience to understand
and the people that are going to see everything on
the social media clips and whatever
of what this man truly created.
You were talking about like it's a family
and coach has talked
about high character.
You want to talk about an unbelievable
family.
Still talk to Mr. Wally and Nick
and all of that and, you know,
tragic.
You know, and there are others. Johnny Tibado
and others. And
you know, it hurts, still hurts.
You know, like you said, it'll drag the tears out.
But it shows what this man means to us, obviously, to the parents that he touched,
to the whole thing, to have him, you know, give that eulogy.
You know, and he shows up all the time.
This isn't, this isn't talk.
You know, this man still shows.
up. He's not, this isn't, this isn't, you know, cheap talk. It's not lip service. It's, it's,
what an example. I'll say that. Thank you. True leader of men. So I took my son to the old
site, Alex Box Stadium. And I was getting on the internet looking at the photos, like,
where was the intimidator in relation to the athletic administration building? So,
obviously not hard to find on the internet, right?
So I go to the spot where I felt like home plate was.
I'm like, why isn't home plate still here?
First and foremost, like, what the hell, man?
Like, leave something.
I'm with it.
Leave something.
I know it's, you know, you needed the buildings, the grocery mart.
Like some things are worth more than money.
I'm with you.
But something interesting happened to me when I was there showing my son around and he was
running around on the grass.
And I was still having a hard time.
of figuring out where I was.
And this is going to sound really woo-woo,
but I was walking at a certain point.
And then I just literally stopped.
And I felt cold in a really good way.
And the goosebumps, you know, the energy came from the ground
and floated all the way through my whole body.
And it was to a point where I've never felt these,
these types of goosebumps.
And I'm telling you it was our boy, Wally.
I'm telling you.
I'm telling you.
Or the mystique of the box.
Something, but something hit me so, all of it.
Something hit me so hard.
Hard to drive by that spot.
I mean, just knowing all of the things that happened there, the magic that was there.
When that ball got rolling downhill and that stadium, it was over with.
It really was.
It was just the crowd was on top of you.
The smoke was coming across in the barbecue pit.
Yeah.
I mean, it was, it was a lecture.
You were done.
It was over.
Over.
I remember in 03 when we, when Baylor was, was here in the regional final, they beat us, you know, Friday night.
And you guys were long gone, but, you know, they beat us Friday.
We were in Tennessee.
Yeah.
We were.
And, you know, we won Saturday, 6'5.
And then we just, but, but before we won 6.5, they had this lefty.
I think his last name was Durden or 6.
something or something like that.
And he hit this ball to center field, and I'm like, this is a problem because they're
about to go up.
There's no wind blowing.
When that ball was hit, that wind started blowing in hard from center field.
And that ball was caught right by the 31.
Yeah.
Right by the 31.
He's a, you know, when Wally got here his freshman year, he was, knew he was supposed
to be here.
You know, it's uncomfortable being a freshman walking into that locker room.
It's uncomfortable being a juco transfer.
Okay.
So it's very similar.
Yeah.
Because of the tradition and what's happened.
And, you know, so it's, it is a little unnerving.
He was comfortable from day one.
He knew in his brain that that's where he belonged on that field and fit right in.
And I told him something that you told me, like, we can't win without you.
You know, Blair told me that my freshman year, and I told Wally that.
And it was true.
You know, we can't win without you.
We've got to have you.
You got to be great, and you are great.
You know, the comforting part for me, though, is I know exactly where he is.
No doubt.
I know exactly where he is.
And so he was, and that's in heaven.
And he's because he was an unbelievable, is so special to everybody.
You go back to a lot of that World Series, too.
Yeah.
So that's, for me, that's
comforting. You know, if there was a question,
I would, yeah, but,
but for me, that is comforting. I love hearing
the chills story, you know.
God, he was,
he was supposed to be there. And there's
many others. This guy was supposed to be
at LSU. You know, you just always knew I was,
you know, and Skip,
he'll tell you, saw me when I was, like,
10 or 11 playing Little Leagues, first time
they saw me. He was recruiting,
Trey and Todd McClure and Gil and all those guys
at Episcopal. Yeah. And,
And my papa went over and grabbed him and said, hey, come look at this kid over here.
And he's like, oh, oh, Papa.
Yeah.
You know, and so, you know, there's just certain guys are just supposed to be there.
And I think, you know, you've got four or five right now here.
And, man, if every school would adopt that too, they'd have success or every business would adopt that too, they don't have to be superstars.
No, no, no.
They just, they need to be that core, you know, that core group.
Yeah.
I remember being in the locker room while my locker was right next to his,
and I was struggling, right, with the injury, you know,
and all that kind of good stuff.
He just looked at me.
He's like, you're fine, man.
Just go have fun.
Be yourself.
You're supposed to be here.
You're good enough to be here or you wouldn't be here.
And, you know, he also gave the whole locker in Pink Eye.
Remember that?
That might be the worst thing he ever did.
The worst thing ever did.
That's the worst thing that balladipon ever did.
I tell you, such a good, oh, my God.
I'm missing.
I love them.
Yep.
And, uh, well, that's the, that's, that is the kid.
You'd want your daughter to marry.
1,000%.
Like that, they say that and that might get overused some.
Mm-hmm.
That's him.
Yeah, like, that wouldn't upset me.
No.
No, no, no, no.
I'm like, dang, girl, you lucked out.
This is working.
Let's do this.
You want to do it now?
Let's keep him. Yeah.
Let's do it right now.
I agree.
But no, again, it's just, it just always goes back to the character you're talking about, you know, that coach keeps talking about with who you recruited and, you know, just this, it's special here.
You know, it's just different.
And I got to bring my son.
He has to bring my son to this beautiful place to meet you guys and to meet, to meet you, coach.
And I remember telling him like, hey, I'm going to Baton Rouge.
I'm going to go interview, Skip.
He's like, oh, it's great.
I go, you're coming with me.
He's a, I get to meet Skip.
like that's a
he's been waiting for this moment
you know and you know
he's 12 you know
and doesn't really fully understand
but because of what you built
through your leadership and
and in and
creating amazing men
he's hell bent to come here
like there's no other place he wants to be
other than LSU
gosh that's awesome
that's pretty dang cool
that is awesome yeah
I mean you have a kid here
running track right
I got two here
I'll have three here next year.
Dude, you have...
I wish you were still the AD, coach.
He gets some scholarship dollars.
Well, that's true.
He's done everything from help and soccer.
Yeah.
As well as other sports.
He's done the same.
And that's really urgent.
Now, we never had that when you guys played,
except for Wally.
We never had that.
And we needed that for you.
We needed that for the other boys.
It's, uh, coaches are looking at how fast the pitch is, of course.
They're looking how far the guy can hit the ball.
And those guys don't necessarily win for you.
You know, you got a guy that hits it less, but his character,
and his ability and teamsmanship, and his desire.
to be number one is better than that.
So we watched a lot of other teams that had great players.
Absolutely.
And beat them.
And beat them.
They were better than us.
I mean, if you did, they had the pros and the guys that were going on,
but they didn't have the quality of the team unit and the high character,
you know, of our kids, especially these two,
because they were leaders.
Here, he played
second base when he was a freshman,
and he was really good, of course.
All-American, right?
Next year,
I say to him, we need you to play third.
There's no problem.
If that's what's best for the team,
I'm moving over to third.
No ego involved.
And, of course, he did,
and he played great,
and in the college world series,
You made that great play at third base.
Oh, and got the guy out at first.
You know, by a little bit.
That was down the line, right?
It was down the line.
I was watching that on TV.
This guy is so nice.
And he always gives it to us.
See, even back in the day.
But he is who molded all of that.
He took, you know, when we all, everybody like anywhere else, when we show up at LSU,
you think you're it.
Right.
You can say it.
You can say it.
I mean, you want to say it.
I'm not.
I'm saying all of us.
Just say it.
I'm not.
Just say Ryan did this.
No, but we all did.
We all did.
But he molds us.
He takes us.
He strips it down and tells us what is real in life and how to get what you want.
Yeah.
Right?
Yep.
It's the little things too.
It is.
It's the help enough other people.
Then you can have what you want sort of thing.
I need him to be really good.
I want him to.
I love him.
Like Ryan was saying earlier.
He molds that.
He takes a bunch of cocky kids and people that think they're going to play shortstop for the Yankees.
Yeah.
And makes them love LSU and love his teammate and gives you something that lasts for life.
Well, you know.
That's him.
Exactly.
But, you know, most coaches, you know, in the pregame for getting ready for a national championship game would start talking about, you know, watch out for the off speed.
Do this, do that.
Do this.
Do that.
You know, if we get this guy here, we're going to do this.
If he gets you in this count, look for this.
I remember sitting in my living room.
They always had him miced up.
Yeah.
Remember, today you represent your family and your maker.
Go play like champions.
Let's go.
That's it.
You deserve it.
You know, he told us.
Yeah, you deserve this.
You're champions today.
You deserve that a lot.
Right, at the end of every story.
Yeah, I mean, this guy turned all of our delusions into reality.
It was subliminal stuff too.
I mean, it was always videos of success
and watching guys before you do things that were great.
It was, and I'll know that was all intentional for him too,
but for us, we didn't know that it was,
but like everything that we looked at and talked about
had something to do with winning in Omaha.
And it was, and so when you got there, it wasn't new.
Like, we may have, I may have never had it batten Omaha before,
but in my brain, I'd seen Blair and all these guys before me,
and it's thousands of times guys having success in Omaha, you know?
So, like, why'd you throw that helmet?
Well, Armando Rios.
Exactly.
He's seen that.
It just happened.
I didn't think about it.
You know, it just happened.
Did you hear what's said?
Why did you throw the helmet like you did?
I saw it.
Because that's what Armando real.
That's what Armando did, no doubt.
Or the other guys, you saw it on a video.
And even though you never thought about it.
You threw, well, other things are like that.
not just going to your right at shortstop
or going to your left at second base or third.
You know, and it's not as if you have to do it every single day.
You have to come up with the concept that you're part of an organization
and you have to do your part.
And you have to root for the other guys to do their part as well.
And not only that, but we had a lot of fun.
No doubt.
As well.
I don't want to sound like it was all.
A lot of fun.
No, it was awesome.
You're talking about seeing it.
You know, you get in the squad room and you pull out that cart with a TV on it.
Yes.
VHS, push it in.
I mean, we're dating ourselves here.
No, no.
There was no.
Hey, bro.
There was no DVDs.
There was no YouTube, you know, mirror, faith.
This was VHS time.
It's VHS.
If we watch these highlights.
and we watch them over and over and over again
until they were fully ingrained into our brain
in our every fabric of our body
and it's because of those things
it's like you're watching it and it's like
yep that's us that's what we're supposed to do
that is what is expected
that is the expectation and every now and again
we get a highlight clip of us
from the weekend before
and watching our guys do the same thing
mixed in mixed in it's like
Oh, this dude.
Master.
The magician.
Yes, indeed.
Yes, indeed.
You guys have a funny skip story you want to tell?
I got a lot of funny skips story.
What's your funny story?
Can I tell mine then?
Please.
You remember you got me suspended, right?
We got you what?
You got me suspended.
From?
From?
For a week in the fall.
Okay.
He's like, I need you to come to my batting cage and work with the boys.
and someone gave me $50
and the next week
he comes up to me
he goes
you gotta go up to compliance
they want to talk to you about the cages
just just be honest
you got paid $50
I said all right coach you got it
go up there
yeah I made 50 bucks
like all right you're going to have to sit out a week
are you serious
they didn't tell you about all the other stuff
that was floating around in there
I was like, what's going on here?
I was just doing what I was told.
The legend here told me to come.
There was a lot of things that all of you did that other people don't do
that play baseball at real good schools.
But they don't have the quality, in my mind,
they don't have the quality of all 30 guys.
See?
Now tell you what, today, boys, there were 30 full scholarships.
Yeah, that's on the ball.
For baseball players.
We had 11.7.
So that meant that nobody had a full.
And they, they didn't, that didn't bother them.
You know, we just wanted to do the important things and represent LSU, our parents,
and other people.
in the best way we could.
And they did.
And it was enjoyable, listen,
it was enjoyable for me to go up
and watch you play with the Cubs, right?
And Fontonho to be at second base.
So, and Spire Jorgerson
was playing for the other team.
Cincinnati, sure was.
So when that was happening,
I went up there
and I saw everybody, of course,
and that was nice.
And not everybody makes the big leagues, but he did in his business, the quality of his family.
You say, that's more urgent, you know, than those who made the big leagues, is so few of those.
Did we have great ones?
Sure, we had Ben McDonald.
We had Doug Thompson.
We had people who were super.
So I'm not saying we didn't have great talent.
I'm saying that it wasn't the only thing that we had.
And the character of the players and their desire to have other people be successful on their team.
And not necessarily for them to have the highest batting average, but for somebody to have it on our team.
That means everything.
Now, of course, they're good in business.
now and boy both of these guys
and I'm not saying that
baseball did it of course
I'm saying that baseball was part
of their growth
in what their parents
taught them what the community
and school taught and baseball was a
strong part of that
because they were really into it
that coach is it fair to say that you
you're more interested in creating
major league men
human beings
than Major League Baseball players.
Yeah.
But that's the thing that was always been so apparent about a coach,
because he was more proud of the man you became,
the husband, the father you became.
That's what mattered.
Which goes back to the identity piece,
because at the end of the day, it's, nobody cares.
Like, in 100 years, who's going to care?
Like, the game's going to forget you.
Baseball forgets everybody.
I mean, it does.
Sure.
It does.
Baseball will forget you.
And so, you know, and that's my message a lot of times
to the guys now that I'm helping is like, yeah, I get it.
Like, this is important.
But like, what's really important?
Like, Paul Skeen's is the greatest picture on planet Earth, literally.
Right?
And so that platform is special.
That's a, he'll never have it again.
No.
Right.
And that's my message to him.
Like, listen, yeah, you're great.
I get it.
Trust me, I don't want to hit off of you.
No.
Right.
But the game will forget you.
Thanks.
Let me say this about the baseball can be, it's a wonderful game, it's the greatest,
but it can be cruel and hard to play at certain times.
And you hit a shot in the shortstop dives and catches the bull.
And the other team hits a little dribbler and it gets a guy to first.
It's baseball.
These guys handled both of those.
you know, whether they hit the ball like that
or whether they fielded a ball
that was a dribbler, couldn't get the guy at first base,
and they overcame all of that.
Wonderful for me.
But more important is to look at them now in the success.
You know, Rhino and his then-girlfriend,
okay?
My granddaughter, she was a cheerleader.
or I know his wife.
My daughter, my granddaughter, who's a teacher now, is we brought her up,
and his wife was so nice.
And he came by, this was in the basketball arena.
This guy's father did so much.
I mean, it was who could cook the jungle, buy it better?
Let's go.
Yeah, Trey McClure.
Pork chops and all.
Yeah.
It was the best of times.
Well, anyway, that means a lot to me having nothing to do with the work jobs, the effort to get our team to be enjoy themselves.
We had that.
Yes.
And dad was great.
But, you know, it goes back to what you were saying.
You know, in the beginning, you go out to play and you're not always sure.
that you can make it.
You know, there's obviously times.
Now, these two guys were so, well, neither would, you weren't, no one was drafted out of high school.
Okay, so they weren't superstars, but they had that high character.
They had all the moves you needed.
Those are the guys that I want.
I want them to pitch.
I want it to hit.
I want it to play D.
Those are the guys who do that.
and I don't understand why other coaches can't pick that up.
I really don't.
The game has changed.
It's lazy recruiting.
I mean, they don't take the time that you took, though.
That's the thing.
Yeah.
It's easy to read numbers now.
Analytics are great.
Oh, yeah.
But it's easy to go, yep, yep, yep, yep, yep, I'll take him.
It's hard to sit down and talk to the parents and look the kid in the eye.
Like, that takes time.
Yeah, it takes time.
And people don't do that now because they have exit villos.
Well, and they have.
you know a team full of mercenaries and one year you know and that's going to change we could be here
for hours i talked to moni lee about that this morning we were you know in the hotel we were just sitting there
talking about you know kind of how hard it is now and how different it is so you know and i think that's
going to change because next year it goes into the fact you got five years to play five you can only
transfer once that's great oh that's happening that's happening that's right that's right that's
that's right that's done that's good news well there's 30 full scholarship
which I like.
Yeah, I like that too.
But there's also the NIL money,
which I don't like it at all.
And I think that, not just a snow-shoe,
but I think there are schools,
baseball teams at schools,
where they're a little bit,
they don't talk a lot about it,
but they're really upset that this guy
gets this amount of money
and I get this.
Yes, it's going on.
And just like this, you know,
nor human nature.
It happens in the big leagues,
happens in college.
And I'm sad about that.
You know, I don't want NIAO money.
You know, I like full scholarships, of course.
And these guys played with it.
Tuition scholars.
Tuition, books, fees, something like that.
Dad and, right now, too, tuition scot.
Dad's had to pay the difference.
Yeah.
But they really would 11.7 scholarship.
They realized that other people had to have tuition too and that we have to contribute and they all handled that so well.
Nobody came in.
No father came in and said, why doesn't my guy have more or can't you do more for my kid?
The kids explained it and everybody understood it was the way to go.
But that's the culture difference now in college baseball because you have someone coming in, right?
And the returners are expected to be the leaders.
It's an example.
But then when the guys come in that have more money than them,
they're like, that causes dissension in culture.
That's hard.
Look, Blair and I lived it.
Baseball is great until I started getting paid.
It must be.
It's such a good one.
It must be so much less fun.
Yes.
I'm worrying about the,
worrying about the end up worrying about,
We never thought about it.
Look, I loved the game.
The second I started getting paid the first and the 15th, it became a job and it was not fun.
The fun was gone.
It was gone.
It was gone.
And now you're, you know, you introduce the variable of money to an 18-year-old who can't process the way they should talk or act or sound in a clubhouse.
I mean, Blair and I did it.
You know, there is angst, of course.
because I'm hitting 3.30 making league minimum.
Kosko Fuku Dome is making $15 million and he's hitting $120.
Yeah, I'm feeling some type of way about that.
Now I'm 27 years old.
I have the maturity to be quiet about it and just say, okay, it's all good.
Now you're asking an 18-year-old Ryan from Broadmoor
or the West Bank tank over here to keep their mouth shut.
Like, I know what I would have said.
Hey, whoa, whoa, time out.
I'm 18, but I don't have that maturity.
So what you're saying is true.
Like, yeah, they're going to act like kids because they're kids.
What we didn't think about with NIL was that variable mentally what money does to the human.
And are they old enough to take it?
They're not.
They just can't.
Yeah, I don't think so.
They can't.
It's, you know, hell, when I was 25.
it was hard. I bet. I bet.
Today, on addition to 30 scholarships full, you know, per team,
which, you know, took away a lot from superstars like you guys,
we couldn't get a full. Now they have the 30 full.
But amazingly enough, N-I-L, you guys says,
well, what can you do for me now, Coach, after I have a full scholarship?
and some of them, well, many of them, you know, get paid.
I mean, they don't have to work for.
Real money.
I mean, sometimes.
Yeah, sometimes huge amounts of money.
Yeah, it's different.
Yeah.
I didn't have that.
And I'm so glad, you know, I said if that ever comes, I have to get out.
But I never did when I was coaching.
And, you know, I.
I can remember Ryan as a freshman.
I remember I had a microphone and, you know, he teased him and he was just, you know, beginning.
And it was wonderful.
Blair was a super stud at second base.
Remember the line drive that you caught when you were off the ground that high.
And moved over to third because that's where we needed a guy.
They treated, they were different.
You know, I'm not saying different in any way except they believed to me when I said that
we can win, but we can still win.
If you're a good guy and make good grades and you're a good teammate, we can still win.
And winning just was one thing of many that we wanted for,
kids. Yeah, I think, again, we always talked about what you've built, but that's the byproduct.
It is. Yeah. It's the day to day that it's, that we're trying to talk about, but being in it, it's, we're so fortunate to know how impactful that really was.
Yeah. You know, his delivery, the story, the timing of it all. It always felt like, oh, my God, he's bringing the, you just had the timing of what we needed as a team.
and when you can put those tried and true principles
and deliver them at the right time like he did,
it's just so impactful.
And it lasts forever.
And then we win.
And we win.
And we're still winning because of what the man gave us
and taught us along with our parents and others.
But just really, really fortunate.
You know, it's a good point because we talk about that top of the mountain goal.
you know in 84 this man puts the call is ruled series on the regular season schedule yeah
really like they've never done it never been never been but you did that and what it created is like
here's the standard now everything here that's the gift that's the process so we're going to do
all the things that we need to do over and over and over and over again because that's where you're built
that's where the individual is built that's where the team is built that's where the culture
built. That's where the winning is built.
And then all of a sudden, you execute that
over and over again, and now you're here.
Without even thinking about it,
right? Of course, we always had
Omaha in the back of our mind. We knew what the
assignment was. Hell, even in the wait room
now it says, road to Omaha starts
here on the wait room. It's like, it's in
our face constantly.
But we're almost numb to it as well.
Yeah, I mean, if you don't
visualize it, understand it, and see it and feel it,
I mean, there was too, very familiar with these
teams, but 0708,
in Chicago.
Number one offense in baseball, number one pitching staff in baseball,
best defense in baseball, and we got swept in the playoffs.
We never talked about the World Series.
Flip side of that, you go play for a manager like Tony Larissa in St. Louis or Bruce
Bochie in San Francisco.
They had both won championships.
It was recent, and it was all they talked about.
All they talked about was the World Series.
All they talked about was October.
I'm like, this is familiar.
I know with this.
And the teams weren't nearly as good.
as the Chicago 0708 teams with Greg Maddox and Carrie Wood and Alfonso Soria.
I mean, the list goes on.
It's Hall of Famers all over the place.
I'm looking around like, I don't belong here.
Right.
And, but we didn't win.
But it was such a familiar feeling for me when I got in those clubhouses and around those men and I go, okay, this is what it looks like.
I mean, let's rewind for a second.
It started with Skip.
And it went
Lupinella
Dusty Baker
Joe Torrey
Tony LaRusa
Bruce Boce
Wow
All gonna be in the Hall of Fame
And the greatest one of all of those
Is sitting right here
Undoubtedly
Oh 100%
I'm serious
It's not even a question
And I'm gonna tell you why
Because
his skill set
Would transcend
any it works in. He said it earlier without even saying it. High school, junior college,
Little League, high school, junior college, Miami, LSU. It would have worked in New York with the
Yankees. It would have worked at Google had he wanted to be the CEO of Google. It would have worked.
It would work at a daycare. It would work anywhere. That's why we enjoy that. And Blair made
a great point, man. He's like, I'm almost jealous. Like, we got to experience that. I mean,
like everybody else gets to read it and see it. Read that book.
and digest it and go, man, this is pretty awesome.
Like, we actually, so we read it, we heard it,
and then we saw it work.
You know, we saw it all the way to the end.
You know, it's, you asked me earlier,
you're like, I don't know if you remember,
but I was on your show a few years ago.
It's your big time now, bro.
Hey, man, I'm finally in the big league.
And you're jacked.
Well, you know, I mean, this is my big leagues.
I finally made it.
True.
You know, it took me years.
I finally made it.
Cool.
You know, I sucked for a long time.
I didn't become what I thought I was going to be in this game, a baseball.
But now I'm doing what I was meant to do.
My purpose, what God created me for was to have great conversations and bring amazing men like this to the audience.
Right.
But here's the thing.
The one thing you said about those World Series championships, you said the difference was,
is everybody in the clubhouse loved each other.
That's an exact quote from that show.
Really?
Yes.
Well, you can go back and you can look at it's exactly what you said.
And it's true, man.
You know, so here's what I want to do.
You know, we're going to start downshifting here and I have one more question for all you guys.
We'll want to start with Skip.
And it's one of the most important questions because it's the heartbeat of this show, right?
This show is called The Determined Society because one day I was so fed up and agitated that people were always making excuses in their life, including myself, most importantly myself.
So I wanted to wake up in a determined society where people chase their dreams, no matter how they felt emotionally.
at that time. After everything that you've been through, everything you accomplished in your life,
what does two determination mean to you?
Determination, of course, is very important both then as players, whether you're in the big leagues,
you know, or your college, and then when you go into business, yeah, determination is really
important. But there are many other things. You know, how do you,
how you behave with other people,
what you can learn from certain people that are older
or in a different part of the business,
what you can learn about finances,
that it's not the most important thing, you know,
and other things that you can learn
and become a better businessman,
or you can go to the big leagues.
You know, there's, you know, I never thought about,
the big leagues with Ryan, you know, although I knew that he would be drafted and he could play.
But I didn't think of that.
I never said to him, boy, you're going to be great, you're going to play into big leagues.
I never said that.
What I wanted for Ryan who had a lot of talent was to max out his talent.
And then let some scout, you know, make the determination and let Ryan, you know, deal with it.
When this guy graduated, you went into some coaching.
I did for a couple years.
I liked that.
And he was excellent.
But then he went out in business.
Didn't pay much.
And then he went out into business.
That's true.
That's the reality of it.
Yes.
You could have been a great coach because the pros told you that.
Absolutely.
And people said to you, you know, you should do this.
But he went the other way, and I like it, you know, what happened to him.
And a rhino, of course, you know, was gifted and maxed out his gifts.
You know, you played.
There are certain other things that you can get out of baseball,
which is, you know, can be a cruel game.
and balls that bounce in the wrong way and dribblers and line drives and pop singles.
You have to learn to live with that.
Same as what you're doing now.
There are times when people don't show.
There are times where they don't do well on the microphone.
You have to live with it and you have to handle it.
And these guys handled that.
And this guy got up at the,
the eighth inning in Omaha and just burst it out into a speech.
You know, not rehearsed or anything.
Not supposed to, I mean, I didn't do it.
He did it himself.
And it was so real, you know, that the other guys picked up.
Boy.
And I think it made a difference in the winning and losing that ball again.
1,000%.
I mean, without it, you don't wait the team up.
I mean, you had to follow it up with the home run.
You know, you had to.
And a 13 pitch, I bat.
What for you, how do you define determination?
You know, I look at it in a couple ways.
And it's in some ways it's things that I'm determined to do sort of daily.
I'm a Catholic and I'm faithful.
And I'm determined for that union to,
to grow and grow and grow.
I'm determined to make sure that I'm in the right spot
with my family, with my friends.
And then because of things I've learned from my family,
from my friends, from my mentors,
I'm really determined.
And coach just said it.
I'm determined to know that things are going to happen today
and that tomorrow I just need to get back up
and get back to work
and take it just.
just like that. That to me, the determination thing to me, I like to drag it really down and make
it simple and not make it complicated and not make it to where I got to figure all these things
out to what I'm just. It's not. What I'm determined about is is being tough enough to get back up.
That's it. That's it. I love it. Ryan. I'm going to use that one because I need that.
Being tough enough to get back up. He's thinking about his golf clubs that he put away after that.
Horset outing with that. Ask the question again.
What does determination mean to you?
Yeah.
You know, I think first you have to,
you have to be at a lock in on what, you know,
what kind of moves you and drives you.
And that changes as people grow and get older.
And I touched it on a little bit earlier,
you know, not having the game define you
and identify you as a person and human being.
My love what Blair said,
I mean, it's 100% true.
you know, being, I mean, just locked, step, determined to have that relationship with God.
Because it, the pressures and stresses of life that we go through to be great, to be successful, to be somebody that can get back up.
Man, it wears on you, bro.
Yes, it does.
Like, and then you don't know that it's wearing on you until it jumps up on you.
And it's on you, right?
And, you know, and so I struggle with that.
I mean, I do.
And it's, it's dumb because it's all, you know, made up probably.
But, but, you know, the being determined every day to be the best version of me.
And I think, you know, as the older I've gotten, more I've realized, like, you know,
It really, the things that we thought were important really aren't that important, you know?
That's really good.
That's true.
That's really good.
I'm determined to be the best father I can be, right?
And husband and friend.
I mean, I think those things are just really, really, really important to me.
And there was a time where I had my perceived success where I don't think I was.
I really don't, you know, because I was so locked in on myself in the game and baseball.
I'm like, okay, this is so stupid.
Yeah.
Yeah. No, I mean, listen, you know, for me, it's all, it's everything that you guys are saying.
It's, you guys are talking about a relentless pursuit. That's all you're talking about, right?
It's the ability to get up and put on your shoes one day when you don't want to.
It's that quietness with that nobody sees that dark work where you're, you know, you're feeling poorly.
You know, I'm going to go out there. I'm going to build my business again tomorrow.
I'm going to take those 25 hacks working opposite field or middle middle or whatever it is I'm struggling with, no matter how I feel about.
it's the ability to get back up and keep on keep on ticking it's very unsexy it's very quiet it is
but it's what happens behind the scene so i just want to thank you guys so much ryan blare and
ultimately coach thank you this has been the most meaningful episode and i cannot wait to share
it with everybody i get to be here with my boys and my coach my mentor and our coach and mentor crying
out loud along with other thousands of men that get to listen to this
and remember and live all of this again
of what they've created through
through Skip and the culture here at LSU that he built.
And for the audience,
what I really want you to do,
I don't ask you to buy anything.
But now I'm going to.
For the first time in a very long time,
yeah, the ads that are played on the deal,
whatever, do whatever you need to.
But this book right here,
everything matters in baseball.
It's not just about baseball.
It's about life.
It's about business.
It's about being a wife.
It's about being a good husband.
been a great human being, teacher, child, whatever it is, skipburton.com or even skipburton.net.
When you go to checkout, make sure you hit the promo code on the bottom and type in TDS for your
discount. Go there right now. And until next time, stay determined.
