I competed as a collegiate baseball player for two seasons while carrying a full academic course load. People who have not played a college sport often imagine that the hard part is the games. The games are the reward. The hard part is everything else: the 6 AM conditioning sessions, the afternoon practices that run three hours, the travel schedules that eat weekends, the film sessions, the weight room commitments, and the constant, quiet pressure to get better every day — knowing that everyone else on the roster is trying to do the same thing.
What that environment builds in a person — if they let it — is a standard of effort that doesn't require external motivation. Not the kind of hard work you put in when someone is watching, but the kind you do because anything less means letting your teammates down. You either do the work or you don't. The results make it obvious.
That standard is what I brought to Mississippi State. It is what I bring to law school. And it's what I'll bring to a litigation practice. The hours at a large firm are long, the expectations are high, and the only way to stand out is to outwork the person next to you without letting quality slip. That's not a foreign concept — that's just baseball.