Read this sentence from paragraph 2 of "I Believe in the Also-Rans." As an English teenager I was schooled in an elite school where I was fed the idea that I was better than others and that achievement and winning were all-important. Which sentence from "A Baseball School for Big-League Dreamers" contrasts with the attitude expressed in the sentence from "I Believe in the Also-Rans"? F "You kind of just don't want to leave the field at the end of the night," he says. G"We are not sending the message that every one of our players are going to wind up playing shortstop for the Mets." H Bolek, who has coached in the minors, the majors and college, says his job is not always about baseball. J And there's something else: Many of the coaches have given years to the game.​

Respuesta :

I think the answer would be G

Answer:

G. "We are not sending the message that every one of our players are going to wind up playing shortstop for the Mets."

Explanation:

The statement from A Baseball School for Big-League Dreamers that contrasts the one from I Believe in the Also-Rans is statement G.

In statement G, the coaches are realistic about their players' chances. They don't want to give them false hopes. They will make sure to use every player's potential as much as they can, but they won't convince them that they are better than others.

In the original statement, the attitude is the opposite - being better than others, winning, and making achievements is all that matters.

This is how these two statements contrast each other.