Originally Posted by BDB:
Now there is no disrespect to legion but right now people are buying into the idea of the more you pay the better it is.
Hi All. I am new to the scene and trying to soak up all the information I can. My daughter played travel softball for many years and is now heading off to study and play D3 ball at a school here in New England. It was a grind with her at times. I pushed too hard, she pushed back. In the end she found the level of play that made her happy and I learned to keep my mouth shut and let her play and have fun.
With those lessons in mind, I promised my son when the time came he too could play travel baseball. We have now completed two years of 14U and 15U AAU tournament ball with different programs, and I must say I am becoming a bit disenchanted with the whole pay to play structure. Kids come get their hitting lessons at the cage every week and make the A team whether or not they belong because it pays the bills for the program.
I recently had a wake up call at a fall Showcase tryout. My son was never clocked on radar before. His fastball and exit speeds both topped out at 81. This is an incoming sophomore, not yet 16, who just picked up the ball and glove for the first time after two weeks of rest since his last summer tourney. We did not expect to make the program. We were just doing it for the tryout experience and figured it would be too much with the upcoming football season.
Then I saw the Legion game on ESPNU and the pitching speeds mentioned above. 80, 81, some in the 84-85 range. It is dawning on me that Legion ball and the HS level state and regional invitationals can be a serious legitimate alternative to some of these big money programs.
Now that I realized my son may have some legitimate skills worthy of development, I am really feeling some obligation to 1) keep him healthy and avoid the injuries as discussed above, 2) Finding him a good off season workout that will help get stronger and stay sharp, and 3) Finding good programs that provide exposure where you earn a spot on the team based on your talent as opposed to you ability to pay.
I'm not saying that Perfect Game or Under Armour are not legitimate, but they'll take anybody's money right? If I'm a college coach would I want to go hang around a tourney like that or would I rather go to one of these HS invitationals to see the top talent in the state nominated by their HS coaches?
If I am off base please set me straight. Like I said I am trying to learn as much as I can in a short time.