Feel like I can talk to this one a little...I live in the area of the North Carolina team playing in the finals tonight. I coached three of their players in travel ball, one I've had the last three summers/fall after legion ball. The other two played for me last year only. We played in a big PG event at Emerson, we played the highest level showcase tournaments we could play in the Carolina's against all the big boys. A vast majority of my team was made up of Legion players that played for me after Legion season, I had guys from three Legion teams that came together onto my team. We lost a total of 5 games in two years. We got knocked out in Emerson by the #1 travel team in the country, East Cobb Yankees, after advancing from pool play into the playoff bracket. They beat us 5-0...was 3-0 going into last inning and we were throwing our #4 pitcher that game. Were they better than us, yes, for sure...were we overmatched...probably so, they had two first rounder's on that team and 16 D1 signees, most of those going to ACC /SEC schools...most every travel team in the country was overmatched by them. We ended up with three guys who got D1 offers, one of those pitched the first 7 innings for North Carolina Sunday in the Legion World Series. He tops out in mid 80's and is a 6'3 lefty. He passed on the D1 offers and is going to play for Catawba because of the relationship he built with their coach through his Legion experience. He could have played for any travel program in the state, believe me I know because they called him all the time trying to get him away from me.
Legion is certainly stronger in some areas of the country than others. In our area...in my opinion unless you are the best of the best, and a big time D1 talent, you need to play Legion. For those that haven't followed the NC team, their head coach is the coach of Catawba College. They were the D2 national runner up in 2014. Every kid in the Legion conference gets exposure to that guy many times. If you look at the roster of Catawba, a perennial D2 power, nearly all the players on that team come from a 45 mile radius of this Legion program.
It's certainly not apples to apples to compare Legion to top tier PG events. After all, the best PG teams are getting the best of the best from all over the country, not kids from one county or town. The kid that pitched last night for NC that you saw throwing 78-81...played for me last summer as well. He's probably the #5 starter on the NC team but has a ton of upside...has only pitched for a couple years and has a great frame. He could have played showcase for one of the teams around here that would have gladly accepted his $4-5K year and not played legion and ended up at a lower tier D2/D3 school because the Velo isn't here yet, instead he's going to play for his Legion coach at Catawba as well, because he knows the upside with this kid. Will not be surprised at all to see him in upper 80's after two years in college. There are three other really kids in that same small county that play only showcase, no legion. Most would consider those three to be the best players in the county...one is already at UNC taking classes and will be fighting for a starting SS position as a freshman, another is a rising Senior committed to UNC and the third will probably never see a college field, RHP that PG has at 94 as a rising Jr. in high school. There are a couple others that played showcase and no legion and ended up with no offers for whatever reason. Basically didn't stand out enough at top tier events, or have a weakness that could not be overcome to play at the D1 level. Had they played Legion they would have likely gotten a lot more chance to be seen and appreciated by the best D2 program in our area.
Sorry for the length of the post, I do think it comes down to being honest about your talent level and definitely the area you live in. I doubt many have it as good as the area of our NC team. They have at least 500 fans at every home game, usually probably closer to a thousand or more. They get to play for a fantastic coach that tirelessly gives of his time and talent. They get to play 60-70 games, each of which matters, for $200-300 and get to be around their childhood friends all summer. Now they are one win away from something really special.