Yeah, just the other day I was watching an interview where Albert Pujols was talking about how difficult it is to focus on baseball while dealing with an abusive stepfather and keeping his grades up for college applications. Seriously, do you have any idea how ridiculous that sounds?
Coaching anyone who is not an MLB player gives you as much experience and right to psychoanalyze pros as I have. That is to say none.
I have a 'half dozen' years of experience in a few things, notably working in and managing chain restaurants. (I was a GM at a Blimpies for a little over a year and a half and have been a Shift Manager at several other places over the years), but I wouldn't begin to tell someone else who has been doing the job on the highest available level, say, the manager of an exclusive Los Angeles restaurant, what he was doing wrong, and I certainly wouldn't do it to someone doing the job on the highest level by assuring people around me that I know exactly what their problem is. Your experience is great, glad you got to work with baseball. But someone who spent 30 years coaching high school and college baseball (obviously not elite colleges, or I'm sure we'd hear it from you. Community College? Were any of the teams you coached in the NCAA?) has zero of the necessary credentials to tell us that they know exactly what is going on inside a player or managers head, or how to fix it. Psychiatry and psychology are inexact sciences at the best of times, though getting better through science, and psychiatry from a non-psychiatrist in this situation is laughable. You sound like a man who spends his free time in 3-D flight simulators bragging to everyone that he knows how to fly a plane.