Yesterday we talked about selective aggression — not swinging more, but swinging with purpose. Today, the question becomes: what do we actually say to support that in games? If aggression starts before the pitch, then our coaching language has to live there too. Yelling mechanics mid-at-bat creates urgency, not clarity. It pulls hitters out of their plan and into reaction mode. Instead of coaching swings, we coach decisions. We reinforce things like: - “What pitch are you hunting here?” - “That didn’t match the plan — good take.” - “Stay committed to your zone.” - “Trust the decision you made before the pitch.” When hitters hear language that validates the plan, they compete freely. They swing with intent, take pitches without frustration, and stay aggressive without chasing. The goal isn’t more information — it’s better timing of information. When our words match the approach we’re teaching, hitters don’t feel rushed or restricted. They feel prepared. That’s how selective aggression shows up in games.