Earley’s influence could be seen in nearly every player that returned to the lineup from the 2021 campaign.
Austin Bost saw his slash improve from .303/.343/.513 to .360/.451/.572 en route to earning All-SEC recognition.
“He made hitting simple,” Bost said. “Hitting is the hardest thing to do in sports. We have done it for so long that he has broken it down to where you don’t have to think about a million different things in the box. He adjusts to you, and he doesn’t try to change you unless he feels you need it. Coach Earley has been huge. He is the best hitting coach in the country.”
Brett Minnich saw an even bigger boost as he became one of the Aggies’ top offensive weapons. He increased his slash from .223/.306/.330 to /306/.409/.453 with one year of Coach Earley’s mentoring. He smacked seven home runs, legged out 15 doubles and plated 51 runs. The native of Colleyville, Texas, emphasized Earley’s ability to adapt his techniques to his pupils.
“His strengths are helping guys with mindset,” Minnich said. “His ability to coach people in a way they need to be coached and recognizing that. People who don’t take harsh criticism, he’s not going to yell at them. People that need harsh criticism, he is going to give it to them. He recognizes that and he feeds into how they learn.”
Despite suffering an injury early in the season, Trevor Werner also saw a drastic increase in his production. The pedestrian numbers of 2021 (.182/.282/.212) ballooned into a 2022 campaign that saw him as another cog in a well-oiled offensive machine. He slashed .256/.357/.489 with eight doubles, one triple, seven home runs and 29 RBI.
“He made me a more mature hitter,” Werner said. “Whether that be in the cages, mechanically, or my approach in the game mid at-bat. He taught me how to prepare in the cages the right way and how to bring that into the game and apply it to be successful on the field.”
Others to reap the benefits of the Earley effect include Ryan Targac (.294/.430/.569, 9 doubles, 2 triples, 15 home runs and 58 RBI) and Jordan Thompson (.258/.400/.475, 8 doubles, 6 home runs and 31 RBI).
Earley also worked wonders on last year’s transfer class. Dylan Rock, who hit 18 home runs in four years at UTSA, posted career-best on-base percentage and slugging percentage numbers while walloping 19 dingers in his last collegiate ride. Hawaii-transfer Kole Kaler filled a huge gap at shortstop and got on base by any means necessary, drawing 53 walks and posting a .376 on-base percentage. Oregon State-transfer Troy Claunch had doubled his runs total from the four prior seasons and registered career highs for doubles (15) and RBI (49).
As much of an impact as he had on his new students, a prior relationship played a key role in A&M surging in 2022 – Earley and Jack Moss reuniting in Aggieland. Earley mentored Moss at Arizona State as a freshman in 2021 when he hit .299 with nine doubles, six home runs and 29 RBI. Earley played a big role in the Englewood, Colorado, native transferring to Texas A&M.
Moss was key in getting teammates to buy into what Earley, one of the top hitting coaches in the nation, was teaching.
“We left a program we both loved came here and were ‘all in’,” Earley said. “He was very instrumental in my coaching last year. He gained a lot of trust from the guys early on last year. That helped me get my message out. He already had me as a coach for a year and had done a lot of the stuff we would be doing. Him being here was probably a bigger help for me than I was for him.”
Moss saw huge gains in his offense, leading the SEC in hits (103) and ranking second in batting average (.380). This season, he enters the fray as a Preseason All-American.