Regarding attitude Fine analysis. It is true that players have motors. There are places within them that are stirred by emotion which brings out the best in them. I'm thinking Puckett and how I'm sure others played better at times by taking some spirit from him. Players in a 7-month grind of a season have lows and highs and are mostly in between somewhere. How to get "the shout" out of them on game 6 of the year which appears to be meaningless, but is no more meaningless in actuality than a game in September. Anecdotally, I experienced this as a high school player. I grew up in a small town that was the smallest town in the conference, so we lost a lot of games, but during my Senior year we rallied during the playoffs or whatever they were called, and we rattled off three victories in a row, and we were on the improbable verge of going to the next level (whatever that was called) but for a hit to the outfield that went through one of our fielder's legs, so we were down by a run going to the bottom of the 7th. I'd never hit a homerun, had never had the strength and knowledge of how do it. I said to the batter who came up before me, get on base and I'm going to hit a home run and we're going to win this thing! He made an out, sadly, but I hit a home run! (What a difference a surge in attitude=belief, desire, anger, etc. can make)