There is no doubt that the Baseball community will continue to put an emphasis on looking for players who are Bigger/Faster/Stronger and it makes sense. Of course, a player needs to have Baseball IQ and Baseball skills too, but that seems to be a given.
I had one knowledgeable Coach tell me "honestly I think kids would be best served to spend about 20 minutes a day on hitting and focus 75% of their efforts on getting Bigger/Faster/Stronger. Maybe throw in some groundballs at the end if there is time."
Do you agree with that? Seems a bit extreme for a 14 year old rising Freshman, but I have an open mind....
Thoughts
My 14 year old (2021) works on improving his game pretty much every day, we make him take a day or two off per week just to rest his body/recover etc.... He loves Baseball, his goal is play the game as long as he can, whether that is playing D3 ball or whatever, he wants to maximize his potential and let the chips fall where they may.
He is currently 5'11" 165 pounds, and has grown about an inch in the last 6 weeks. Docs tell us he'll probably end up around 6'2"-6'4", we'll see....he isn't shaving yet.
My question is about setting priorities. He wanted to start doing Jaeger Bands and throwing drills 2-3 times a week, so he's been doing that. Throwing velocity is slowly increasing. He & I both believe hitting is a skill that needs to be worked on pretty much every day. He is working on learning every position besides Pitcher & Catcher and that takes time & reps.
Reality is, he needs to work on his overall strength & improving his Speed/60 time too. That is the world we live in. You can say: "he is too young to be concerned about Showcases and not ready for Showcases yet" and I wholeheartedly agree. However: you can't get away from it. Every single top Travel Team in our area times players in the 60 at tryouts. And tryouts for the 2018 15U teams are in 10-11 weeks.
Yesterday we had a limited amount of time to work out. So he did the Jaeger Bands, worked on throwing drills, hit in the cage, took some fly balls in the Outfield, but with only 15 minutes left in our time, instead of hitting him a bucket of ground balls, he worked on his running and on improving his 60 time.
That is such a difference from when I grew up.