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If you’re a high school catcher who wants to play college baseball, your ability to throw is one of the biggest separators in the recruiting process — but most catchers train it the wrong way. Pop time and throwing velocity matter, but they are not what college coaches are actually evaluating. What they care about is whether your throw projects to their level — whether it holds up when the game speeds up and runners are actively testing you. ----- In this video, I break down why most high school catchers stall their throwing development by chasing metrics instead of learning how to control the running game — and how that mistake quietly caps their ceiling, even if the numbers look good. In this video, you’ll learn: • Why pop time and velocity are indicators, not the goal • What “projectability” really means for catchers • Why two catchers with the same pop time can be evaluated very differently • How controlling the running game actually improves your metrics • Why throwing must be trained as a sequence, not isolated parts This channel exists to help catchers and families think clearly about development and recruiting — whether you ever work with me directly or not. ----- If you’re a catcher (or a parent of one) who wants clarity on where you’re actually at, what’s limiting your development, and whether recruiting even makes sense yet, you can learn more about how I work with serious catchers below. 👉 Learn more about College Ready Catcher: [LINK COMING SOON] ----- high school catcher college baseball recruiting catcher pop time catcher throwing mechanics catcher velocity college catcher development catcher recruiting advice baseball catcher training