Bakich soon learned that Corbin lived and breathed baseball. Corbin would seemingly work “around the clock,” Bakich said, with Corbin’s wife, Maggie, often helping stuff recruiting levels into envelopes deep into the night. But Bakich was not discouraged as he witnessed Corbin’s life in action. Instead, he saw the inner-workings of a dedicated and successful coach.
Omaha Notebook: Old Faces, New Places
When Erik Bakich first arrived at Clemson as a volunteer assistant on its baseball staff in 2002, he met an assistant named Tim Corbin. Almost immediately, Bakich sensed a unique professionalism about Corbin, and he felt drawn to emulate his new coaching colleague's process.
I got here thinking I was going to work the same hours he works. I had no idea what I was signing myself up for. I felt like this was the guy I wanted to be around.
Erik BakichVanderbilt is not Vanderbilt without Erik Bakich. He built a recruiting base that still stands today. The David Prices, the Pedro Alvarez's, the Dominic de la Osas, the David Macias's. Those are all because of Erik … You could just tell he had an engine that was just completely different than most people you meet. Just an unbelievable passion for teaching and coaching and being around people. He's got everything you would want in a teacher.
Tim CorbinYou hear the phrase a lot about being in the right place at the right time and surrounding yourself with the right people. I felt like hit the jackpot with that when I got to Clemson.
Erik BakichIf we don't have that, then we can't -- we don't understand what it's like to play on the other end of the spectrum. To be loose and play with a benefit system and a confidence like, you know, why can't we do this?
Erik BakichYou develop into an elite team. You might not have been an elite team in April … We found ourselves in that situation in 2014, and Erik's team has centrally found itself in that situation this year.
Tim Corbin