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Son is a freshman catcher at JUCO in Alabama looking for a Summer team.  One of his coaches has been assisting in trying to find him a spot and seems to have secured a temporary / conditional offer from a team in the Northwoods League (which sounds like he would potentially play for a week or two until their regular players get there).

He has also been reaching out on his own to teams in the Coastal Plain League and SCBL.  Not much interest to date from Coastal Plain teams but appears to have an offer from an SCBL team.

We're new at all of this and don't completely understand how all of it works.  Also sounds like we may be late to the party although he just finished his Freshman Fall season.

My initial thoughts:

Northwoods temporary contract seems like a good opportunity to go and try to prove yourself and earn something (during same summer or later).  Also a long way to go for a 1 or 2 week deal?

SCBL opportunity is much closer to home and the league appears solid / good competition etc.  Also thinking some time in the SCBL could feed into future opportunity in the Coastal Plain since both are in the same areas.

Searched on the forum but most of the info I found was 10 years old or more.  Wondering if anyone has more recent info and guidance they could share?

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If he can do the Northwoods temp contract, I'd do that and then take it from there. Maybe it works out that he stays longer. Even if not, could open doors for future summers.

If he has a good spring, he'll be able to find a league/team to play on. If he doesn't have a good spring, maybe he doesn't play summer ball and concentrate on what he needs to improve upon?

My son played Northwoods for two seasons. There were a ton of guys who transferred in and out, depending on what their college coaches thought they needed. I would go with that, but work with his coach to see what skills they want him to focus on. Hopefully the college coach would at least talk to the Northwoods coach so they can be on the same page about strengths, needs, etc. My son was a pitcher, so his coaches wanted him to just get in more innings. It was a great experience. He learned a lot and they were terrifically flexible about comings and goings.

Playing time is often dependent on the summer team's relationship with your college coach, which is why going somewhere that a coach has arranged is a good thing, if possible.

Leagues where you don't have to pay high fees are generally better than leagues that are pay-to-play.  (Northwoods, at least a few years ago, had a fee that was I thought was reasonable, included food and housing - and it obviously is one of the best leagues).  Leagues that house players with host families can be better experiences, especially for a freshman, than ones that put players in dorms or condos, or leave them to find housing on their own (although that depends on your host family - my son's ranged from slighly weird to luxurious).

You can look at last summer's rosters to see where the team/league is drawing its players.  Maybe that doesn't matter so much to the overall experience, but it might.

Good luck!

Freshman position players are harder to place because there's no track record for how they hit against better pitching, unless they're at a big time program. BUT, catchers unfortunately seem to be more susceptible to injuries so spots can pop up in a hurry. Most teams in a perfect world carry 2.5 catchers-two to rotate and then an emergency guy that also plays another position that can catch if the other two get hurt.     I'm the president of a Valley League team and most teams on our league seem to carry 3 catchers.  If his coach would write a reference letter, he could e-mail all the teams  in various leagues and if a spot pops up as often happens, he may get contacted. If he gets decent playing time in the spring and performs well, that will be a big help.   (Teams are always needing bullpen catchers so another possibility would be for him to offer to be the bullpen catcher-he'll get a lot of catching in, he will probably get to take BP, and if one of the other catchers gets hurt, or goes home to his girlfriend,  your son could slide into that spot. )       

Anyone have any insight on the Prospect League?

Son told coach he would be interested in the temporary contract for the Northwoods but wanted to continue playing after that somewhere if that opportunity wasn't extended, etc.  Coach told him today about a full time contract in the Prospect League.  Trying to research it now but curious if anyone has any experience with that one.

http://www.calripkenleague.org/view/calripkenleague

League based in N Virginia, DC, Maryland mostly around the beltway.  Lots of Freshmen/Sophomores so solid opportunity to play.  Travel is usually within an hour of your home team, so that cuts a lot of travel time.  40 or so games which is not comparable to the Northwoods League but still a good number of games.  Quite a few players have had a lot of success after funneling through the league.

Big league is obviously the Cape Cod League if he can get there after his Sophomore season.

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