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I have been  in contact with some top schools for my 2019 , I send them some info Etc ,on him and a few have replied saying cause of ncaa rules they can't email about  recruiting  and such ,  but they send me links and invites to their camps ,are these potentially real invites to take a look at my 2019 or is it just to get us as another camper ?

Thx
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Originally Posted by c2019:
I have been  in contact with some top schools for my 2019 , I send them some info Etc ,on him and a few have replied saying cause of ncaa rules they can't email about  recruiting  and such ,  but they send me links and invites to their camps ,are these potentially real invites to take a look at my 2019 or is it just to get us as another camper ?

Thx

Presume them guilty of only wanting your money until the prove themselves innocent of that vice. 

Not to be an A$$ but why are you in contact. Your son should be the one contacting the schools. As you move through this process it needs to be your son leading the way. There wil be coaches that will look down upon your son if you are doing the contacting and work for him. 

 

 

As said said by SluggerDad consider camp invites nothing more the a fundraising opportunity at this point.  Use the search function on this website and you will find lots of info on this. 

Originally Posted by joes87:

Not to be an A$$ but why are you in contact. Your son should be the one contacting the schools. As you move through this process it needs to be your son leading the way. There wil be coaches that will look down upon your son if you are doing the contacting and work for him. 

 

 

As said said by SluggerDad consider camp invites nothing more the a fundraising opportunity at this point.  Use the search function on this website and you will find lots of info on this. 

He/She is doing it because the player isn't quite ready as a freshman but mom or dad can't hardly wait!

At least let him get a season of HS ball in.

To answer your question,  your inquiry means interest, so why not invite the player to camp.

Do a search, just had a very big discussion on this here on the HSBBW.

Originally Posted by c2019:
I have been  in contact with some top schools for my 2019 , I send them some info Etc ,on him and a few have replied saying cause of ncaa rules they can't email about  recruiting  and such ,  but they send me links and invites to their camps ,are these potentially real invites to take a look at my 2019 or is it just to get us as another camper ?

Thx

What's his velocity?  

I have a 2019 and I get the same invites.  I know they have my email from other camps and I am happy for it.  The more info I get for my son the better.  He likes the camps because he gets to show his stuff and size up the competition.  I like the camps because he gets to meet more adults.  It's fun for him so it's a win/win for me.  Frankly, I don't care if he plays in college. I'd rather he pick a school for academics but it's his call.  I know to the outside observer it may seem like dad is pushing but I know the truth.  If he wants to play after high school he is going to have to do the work.  Enjoy the ride. 

Originally Posted by standballdad:
Originally Posted by c2019:
His velo is 89mph
Bat Exit 87

how did you get these measurements? If his velo is already 89 he should be getting lots of interest.

We went through this with c2019 on another thread.  The numbers are legit according to my internet sleuthing.  

 

Camps are not the same for every player.  I think many here would tell you that for most 2019s these camps are really a revenue driver for the coaches and a chance for the players to receive instruction from college coaches and players and see how they stack up and where they need to improve.  A 2019 with limited skills and lower velocity most likely will not generate much interest from the coaches.  

 

A 2019 with velocity at the 99th percentile for his grade most likely would be noticed.  What "noticed" means - I'm not sure.  I don't think you'd know unless you have your 2019 attend one of the camps.  Are you sending them the link to a site with his info verified by an outside source?  If it's just you telling them his velo and bat speed they might not believe it (without seeing it).

c2019, for most, when they get these links, the primary purpose is moneymaker for the school.  But, as I'm sure you are figuring out by now, there isn't a school in the country that wouldn't be interested in getting a free initial look at a freshman who throws 89.  The possible exception would be if your son is not up to academic standards for a given school.

 

Someone mentioned that the player should be driving the process and making the contacts.  This is very true.  Someone else mentioned that your son is probably too young to handle those things.  This is also probably true.  So you have a situation where you have to be careful.  Just be aware that it can be a big red flag to an RC that a dad is contacting him instead of the player.  Even as gifted as your son may be, you don't want to put out negative impressions. 

c2019, if he is a freshmen throwing 89 just send them a note with his summer schedule (once he get's it sorted out in the spring) and they will come find you. Don't waste time on college camps. 

 

Forgetting about baseball he/you should be starting discussions on where he would like to go to college, as far as areas and major interest. Obviously he will not know at this point, but it is a great time to sit around and have meaningful discussions (believe me these are sometimes hard to have with HSers) with your son and what might interest him in his working life. 

 

As far as the process it is a team effort, with you helping him set up the email account he will use and helping him work through his list of schools. 

 

Good luck!

Originally Posted by c2019:
His velo is 89mph
Bat Exit 87

My opinion.  If he is throwing 89 mph, skip the camps.  You don't need no stinking camps.  Change your approach.  Get him to a showcase to get some verified measurables and then have your kid and his coach start working the system.  My guess is they'll be hounding you shortly.  In my area, the one 2018 who has committed his Freshman year throws that hard.  Good luck. 

Don't overlook the PBR (or PG) exposure. You need the 89 documented by an organization that a coach can trust. Otherwise it's just you telling a school he can throw 89 - not likely to be believed at first glance. Limit any college camps to schools he is definitely interested in because, I can tell you, if he shows up at a camp as a 2019 throwing 89mph, the interest will be immediate.

Originally Posted by BOF:

c2019, if he is a freshmen throwing 89 just send them a note with his summer schedule (once he get's it sorted out in the spring) and they will come find you. Don't waste time on college camps. 

 

With that kind of velo, I would also include the HS schedule, and the HS coach's name and number. The schools within driving distance might send someone to verify his numbers, and some of the other schools might send someone they know who lives in your area.

 

If you think your son would present himself well speaking on the phone, then have him call them (they can answer and talk to him, but they can't return his call). Send a very brief email first with name, number and velo. The coach may put your son's name/number in his phone, and actually answer when he calls. If he doesn't answer, leave a message so that he knows the number next time. Trust me, they will want to talk to him.

 

PBR wouldn't be a bad idea to get his numbers documented, especially if you think he could end up going to college in the midwest. For PG, I would make sure that he attends a PG tournament next summer to get his velo posted (I don't think they record velo at Super25 tournaments). If his summer team isn't going to one, you could easily get a guest spot with another team, probably in several different age groups.

 

Good luck.

Originally Posted by MidAtlanticDad:
Originally Posted by BOF:

c2019, if he is a freshmen throwing 89 just send them a note with his summer schedule (once he get's it sorted out in the spring) and they will come find you. Don't waste time on college camps. 

 

With that kind of velo, I would also include the HS schedule, and the HS coach's name and number. The schools within driving distance might send someone to verify his numbers, and some of the other schools might send someone they know who lives in your area.

 

If you think your son would present himself well speaking on the phone, then have him call them (they can answer and talk to him, but they can't return his call). Send a very brief email first with name, number and velo. The coach may put your son's name/number in his phone, and actually answer when he calls. If he doesn't answer, leave a message so that he knows the number next time. Trust me, they will want to talk to him.

 

PBR wouldn't be a bad idea to get his numbers documented, especially if you think he could end up going to college in the midwest. For PG, I would make sure that he attends a PG tournament next summer to get his velo posted (I don't think they record velo at Super25 tournaments). If his summer team isn't going to one, you could easily get a guest spot with another team, probably in several different age groups.

 

Good luck.

The biggest help you get from PBR or PG regardless of where you want to go to college is that a coach can then simply look at your profile and know that you aren't yanking his chain - somebody reputable clocked the kid at 89. Personally, I don't believe that if you simply tell a coach you're throwing 89 as a frosh he's going to send anyone out to try and verify it unless it's very convenient. he'd figure if it's true, it's going to show up on somebody's (PG or PBR?) website that he can trust.

thanks again, that's what im shooting for, to get his numbers verified, he has been approached by some well respected coaches who run showcases in the Midwest to have him come out  in the summer, and his HS coach does have a nice track record with a state title under his belt, along with his new  catching coach with a state title under his belt too, and his Summer team coach being very respected.im  having him around good people as we take this journey.

 

and his grades are good, his HS coach wont alone kids to play unless that have at least a 3.0. 

 

Last edited by c2019

Just an FYI, in case you don't know.  PG tournaments clock PITCHER velocities.  PG showcases will clock every stat that's able to be clocked with their fancy gizmo's.

 

I'd have to say though, if it were me with my TOTALLY limited experience, and my kid was a 2019 throwing 89 across the infield then I wouldn't pay the $600 for the showcase yet. What would you even do with serious offers right now?

 

In theory if he is throwing 89 in 9th grade he will be throwing 89+ in 11th grade. It's been made clear on here that the early signing advantage goes to the school, not the player.  If they want him in 9th they should want him in 11th grade and there is a higher level of confidence that they actually want HIM, not what they think he will do in 5 years.

I would not bother with any camps.... might go to a PG event... is he hitting 89 or sitting 89 ? big difference...  Also, learn from my mistakes, don't go and parade him around to every showcase and camp like I did with 2014...

 

That will just wear him thin and you'll end up wasting money... 

 

If he is a 2019 RHP topping 89  does he have control off off speed?  Where does he sit ?  what are the velo's on the off speed, How tall is he, what is his body type, projection.... these are the reasons they want to see him play, and they want to see him play in a game against like competition to see if he is a competitor, knows how to pitch ( for his age)  , they will watch him at a showcase and take your money but would rather see him play when it matters. 

 

The same is true if he is a third baseman... that velo is great across the infield but if you are on the corners you have to mash the ball.  You may not get a ball hit at you all game, but you will bat.

 

Poo poo the camps and showcases, except PG and get on a good travel team, work hard, send out your schedules , let your travel coach sell him.  Sit back and enjoy.

Originally Posted by bacdorslider:

I would not bother with any camps.... might go to a PG event... is he hitting 89 or sitting 89 ? big difference...  Also, learn from my mistakes, don't go and parade him around to every showcase and camp like I did with 2014...

 

That will just wear him thin and you'll end up wasting money... 

 

If he is a 2019 RHP topping 89  does he have control off off speed?  Where does he sit ?  what are the velo's on the off speed, How tall is he, what is his body type, projection.... these are the reasons they want to see him play, and they want to see him play in a game against like competition to see if he is a competitor, knows how to pitch ( for his age)  , they will watch him at a showcase and take your money but would rather see him play when it matters. 

 

The same is true if he is a third baseman... that velo is great across the infield but if you are on the corners you have to mash the ball.  You may not get a ball hit at you all game, but you will bat.

 

Poo poo the camps and showcases, except PG and get on a good travel team, work hard, send out your schedules , let your travel coach sell him.  Sit back and enjoy.

He never said that his son was a pitcher.  In another topic he said he was a catcher and 3B position player.  Here he stated that his velocity is 89 and posted his bat exit velocity.   

I asked if the velo came from the mound.

Probably hasn't answered me because I am in the wait until you play a HS game corner and I am not telling him what he wants to hear.

Why is everyone assuming the velo is from the mound? I want to know if he can pitch.

 

 

Well, last week it was a 2018 now it's a 2019...Hmm

Why is a 2019 trying to get in front of Colleges? Let me play devils advocate for a moment. So, you take your 2019 to a college camp, the whole point of a college camp is for the coaches at the college to evaluate your son and in the best case scenario, evaluate your son and say " We'd like to offer your son a baseball scholarship" at that point your son will need to make a decision. Is your son really prepared to make a decision on where he would like to attend college and live for 4 years AND make that decision 4 years in advance?

Also, a 2019 hasn't taken standardized tests ( SAT ) yet or actually established a legit HS GPA . I mean, how is your son  going to determine whether or not it is a proper academic fit if he has no real academic data on himself?

Based on some of the info provided the kid seems like a talented underclassmen. Generally, talented underclassmen become talented upperclassmen right? So, baring injury or disinterest in the game, the kid's skills will improve. Why showcase a work in progress when you can showcase a more polished player in a few years?

Don't get me wrong, I understand a parent wanting to get a jump start and get things rolling for college baseball. I get it. But the NCAA men's college baseball recruiting timeline just doesn't line up with proactive parents.

Again, I'd like to point out that once players and parents do in fact enter the recruiting maze they usually get lost quickly. More times than not this is because they do not understand how the colleges communicate interest in potential recruits.

Basically there are 3 reactions in recruiting. It's sort of like:  YES, NO and MAYBE. That goes for the players as well as the RC's . With my son early on when we discussed a recruiting strategy and I mentioned the military schools he said NO or once when an east coast RC phoned him and inquired about his interest level in their school he told me MAYBE. With the RC's the YES is loud and clear. The MAYBE'S are expressed in the form of phone calls/ texts to the players or HS/ travel ball coach's. The NO's generally aren't verbalized by a RC unless the player flat out asks,  but they are also loud and clear in the form of indifference and lack of communication.Just my 2 cents.

Short of a kids 'Dream school' or family legacy issues, in my opinion there are only maybe a handful of schools that make sense for a 2018 let alone a 2019 to 'early commit' to and this would more be a 'Baseball decision' than an academic decision:

 

UCLA

STANFORD ( They won't offer a 2019 without more academic info  )

MIAMI

USC

NORTH CAROLINA

VANDY

ARIZONA STATE

CAL STATE FULLERTON

TCU

 

I'm sure I may have missed a couple.But only a couple. It's a really short list. With the exception of Stanford These schools are 'baseball factories' for 2019's that expect to go in the 2021 , 2022 MLB draft. These are the ONLY schools I would advise a 2018 or 2019 to commit to and that would be purely a 'baseball decision ' and baseball decisions are only seriously considered with the aforementioned schools. When these schools offer, Well.... you say YES. And if you are a parent of a 2019 running your kid out to camp and your camp isn't at a college listed above, you are wasting your time and money.

Lastly, if you are determined to do college showcase work with a 2019 and have decided to attack the list of schools above I commend you and wish you and your son the very best of luck.

But know this, The aforementioned schools recruit only the very, very TOP players in the country. THE BEST OF THE BEST. There are no exceptions.

 

 

 

 

Last edited by StrainedOblique
<small class="time"> Nov 21</small>

2020 class WOW! RT : Proud to say that I have official committed to Arizona!✍

 

<small class="time"> Nov 2</small>

Congrats to 2019 for committing to congrats buddy!

 

 

Add Louisville and Arizona to the list.  Mississippi State also.  Follow Ray Deleon on twitter if you want to see all the 2018's and their school.  I don't know how big the Canes are, but the Banditos are pretty big in these parts for big time players and commits.

On another topic entitled 2019 evaluation, PG gives excellent advice about catching and arm velo for evaluation. My son played 3B and a rocket for an arm, but slower and more accurate from the mound.  He was a pitcher, not a thrower.

Here is what I don't get.  The player is in HS, throws fast( never said from where) but dad keeping him from being a pitcher?  

I wanna know arm speed from the mound.

 

Originally Posted by c2019:
Tpm , he is not a pitcher ,that's why I never answered , I don't care if he is a pitcher , he's a catcher...... The throws were from the 3b and of . Was from 88-89 steady,  he was told my a top scout in il . To stay behind the plate , cause with a electric arm they will make him a pitcher later on .

IMHO that's terrible advice.

Originally Posted by StrainedOblique:

Well, last week it was a 2018 now it's a 2019...Hmm

Why is a 2019 trying to get in front of Colleges? Let me play devils advocate for a moment. So, you take your 2019 to a college camp, the whole point of a college camp is for the coaches at the college to evaluate your son and in the best case scenario, evaluate your son and say " We'd like to offer your son a baseball scholarship" at that point your son will need to make a decision. Is your son really prepared to make a decision on where he would like to attend college and live for 4 years AND make that decision 4 years in advance?

Also, a 2019 hasn't taken standardized tests ( SAT ) yet or actually established a legit HS GPA . I mean, how is your son  going to determine whether or not it is a proper academic fit if he has no real academic data on himself?

Based on some of the info provided the kid seems like a talented underclassmen. Generally, talented underclassmen become talented upperclassmen right? So, baring injury or disinterest in the game, the kid's skills will improve. Why showcase a work in progress when you can showcase a more polished player in a few years?

Don't get me wrong, I understand a parent wanting to get a jump start and get things rolling for college baseball. I get it. But the NCAA men's college baseball recruiting timeline just doesn't line up with proactive parents.

Again, I'd like to point out that once players and parents do in fact enter the recruiting maze they usually get lost quickly. More times than not this is because they do not understand how the colleges communicate interest in potential recruits.

Basically there are 3 reactions in recruiting. It's sort of like:  YES, NO and MAYBE. That goes for the players as well as the RC's . With my son early on when we discussed a recruiting strategy and I mentioned the military schools he said NO or once when an east coast RC phoned him and inquired about his interest level in their school he told me MAYBE. With the RC's the YES is loud and clear. The MAYBE'S are expressed in the form of phone calls/ texts to the players or HS/ travel ball coach's. The NO's generally aren't verbalized by a RC unless the player flat out asks,  but they are also loud and clear in the form of indifference and lack of communication.Just my 2 cents.

Short of a kids 'Dream school' or family legacy issues, in my opinion there are only maybe a handful of schools that make sense for a 2018 let alone a 2019 to 'early commit' to and this would more be a 'Baseball decision' than an academic decision:

 

UCLA

STANFORD ( They won't offer a 2019 without more academic info  )

MIAMI

USC

NORTH CAROLINA

VANDY

ARIZONA STATE

CAL STATE FULLERTON

TCU

 

I'm sure I may have missed a couple.But only a couple. It's a really short list. With the exception of Stanford These schools are 'baseball factories' for 2019's that expect to go in the 2021 , 2022 MLB draft. These are the ONLY schools I would advise a 2018 or 2019 to commit to and that would be purely a 'baseball decision ' and baseball decisions are only seriously considered with the aforementioned schools. When these schools offer, Well.... you say YES. And if you are a parent of a 2019 running your kid out to camp and your camp isn't at a college listed above, you are wasting your time and money.

Lastly, if you are determined to do college showcase work with a 2019 and have decided to attack the list of schools above I commend you and wish you and your son the very best of luck.

But know this, The aforementioned schools recruit only the very, very TOP players in the country. THE BEST OF THE BEST. There are no exceptions.

 

 

 

 

Not sure I get this list. Vandy, Stanford and (maybe) NC, I get. They are high academic schools. However ASU, Miami, CSF? You could just as easily substitute 20 more schools in those spots (e.g. Arkansas, Mississipi St., Oregon St., Arizona). Note, too, that these and a handful of others represent a large proportion of the early commits anyway.

Originally Posted by ironhorse:

What position does the kid enjoy playing the most? 

 

I think that should factor in just a little bit. Maybe I'm naive. He could be done playing in 2 years. You never know. Let him maximize his enjoyment in the greatest game there is, rather than having adults micromanage his future. Just a thought.

there's no fun in that.......JK

Originally Posted by TPM:
Originally Posted by bacdorslider:

I would not bother with any camps.... might go to a PG event... is he hitting 89 or sitting 89 ? big difference...  Also, learn from my mistakes, don't go and parade him around to every showcase and camp like I did with 2014...

 

That will just wear him thin and you'll end up wasting money... 

 

If he is a 2019 RHP topping 89  does he have control off off speed?  Where does he sit ?  what are the velo's on the off speed, How tall is he, what is his body type, projection.... these are the reasons they want to see him play, and they want to see him play in a game against like competition to see if he is a competitor, knows how to pitch ( for his age)  , they will watch him at a showcase and take your money but would rather see him play when it matters. 

 

The same is true if he is a third baseman... that velo is great across the infield but if you are on the corners you have to mash the ball.  You may not get a ball hit at you all game, but you will bat.

 

Poo poo the camps and showcases, except PG and get on a good travel team, work hard, send out your schedules , let your travel coach sell him.  Sit back and enjoy.

He never said that his son was a pitcher.  In another topic he said he was a catcher and 3B position player.  Here he stated that his velocity is 89 and posted his bat exit velocity.   

I asked if the velo came from the mound.

Probably hasn't answered me because I am in the wait until you play a HS game corner and I am not telling him what he wants to hear.

Why is everyone assuming the velo is from the mound? I want to know if he can pitch.

 

 

I made the same mistake. When you see a velo posted with no other stats, the only thought is usually pitching. That sort of changes everything. I would assume that's from third (if it's from F2, forget the commitments, he'll be in the show by the time he's 19). Impressive, but needs a bat to go along with it it's a useless number. If he were a SS it would be slightly different. I would also assume, though, if he's 89 across the diamond, he's got a good pop time from behind the dish.

'Not sure I get this list. Vandy, Stanford and (maybe) NC, I get. They are high academic schools. However ASU, Miami, CSF? You could just as easily substitute 20 more schools in those spots (e.g. Arkansas, Mississipi St., Oregon St., Arizona). Note, too, that these and a handful of others represent a large proportion of the early commits anyway.'

Roothog is correct. The list is clearly debatable and you could substitute other schools. But once again of the approx 300 NCAA D-1 programs, this is a very short list. UCLA , USC these are big baseball programs at schools with incredibly low acceptance rates. Stanford, UCLA being a the top of the food chain academically. When these schools offer. You go.

The larger point I was trying to make is that unless its an elite baseball factory or life changing school w/big program there is NO point in committing for a 2019. Just my opinion

Last edited by StrainedOblique
StrainedOblique posted:

'Not sure I get this list. Vandy, Stanford and (maybe) NC, I get. They are high academic schools. However ASU, Miami, CSF? You could just as easily substitute 20 more schools in those spots (e.g. Arkansas, Mississipi St., Oregon St., Arizona). Note, too, that these and a handful of others represent a large proportion of the early commits anyway.'

Roothog is correct. The list is clearly debatable and you could substitute other schools. But once again of the approx 300 NCAA D-1 programs, this is a very short list. UCLA , USC these are big baseball programs at schools with incredibly low acceptance rates. Stanford, UCLA being a the top of the food chain academically. When these schools offfer. You go.

The larger point I was trying to make is that unless its an elite baseball factory or life changing school w/big program there is NO point in committing for a 2019. Just my opinion

so your saying if Louisville ,sends me a note to attend their camp, I should then ?lol

c2019 posted:
StrainedOblique posted:

'Not sure I get this list. Vandy, Stanford and (maybe) NC, I get. They are high academic schools. However ASU, Miami, CSF? You could just as easily substitute 20 more schools in those spots (e.g. Arkansas, Mississipi St., Oregon St., Arizona). Note, too, that these and a handful of others represent a large proportion of the early commits anyway.'

Roothog is correct. The list is clearly debatable and you could substitute other schools. But once again of the approx 300 NCAA D-1 programs, this is a very short list. UCLA , USC these are big baseball programs at schools with incredibly low acceptance rates. Stanford, UCLA being a the top of the food chain academically. When these schools offfer. You go.

The larger point I was trying to make is that unless its an elite baseball factory or life changing school w/big program there is NO point in committing for a 2019. Just my opinion

so your saying if Louisville ,sends me a note to attend their camp, I should then ?lol

Well, YES  if your are working on recruiting for a 2019, ACC, SEC, Pac-12 are seemingly schools where one would seriously consider an early commit for a 2019. You also need to factor in whether or not your son has any interest in attending the University if he was to be offered. I mean if he doesn't have any interest in living in Louisville then you would pass, but at his age he probably doesn't know what he wants. So, it may be about checking out the city, campus while attending camp.

 

Last edited by StrainedOblique

There is plenty camps out there but your son should attend because your son may learn something from the coaches and get a chance to visit the campus, then if someday one of those schools offers your son, then he will not have to visit.  Sending out videos to get invites to some of the better programs at this time is not productive, unless you have all the money in the world to spend.

You do not have to attend a camp to get recruited, even the coaches will tell you that. Once again, your son has to get out there and PLAY at the next level, make the HS team, join a very good travel team that will travel nationally and attend top tournaments for exposure.  But first let your son grow up a bit and let him decide where he wants to attend (what geographically are of the country) and what degree he wants to pursue.  Be careful what you wish for, many of those very large D1 programs are NOT for everyone.

I know of a few players who attended every camp in the state year after year and still never got scholarships to those programs, so keep that in mind.

I agree on the camps comments.  My 2016 went to 6 camps and did not receive instruction at any of them.   From what 2106 told me the players were not there for instruction,  they were there to be recruited (hopefully).   All the conversation in the dugouts during an 11 inning game with 5 batters per side was about who was talking to what school (at the last camp).  

Its interesting, I think there are two recruiting streams.  One that's for "regular" college baseball recruits that are recruited between Jr and Sr year and commit as they start Sr year of HS - in some of these cases they are recruited earlier but commit sometime before or as they enter sr yr of HS.   And then you have your elite or "stud" players.  They seem to commit much, much earlier - in some cases as early as c2019s son (meaning only they commit as early as that year).  

c2109 - I don't see any reason for your son to attend college camps at this stage of the game.  Give him some time to see what position he ends up with in HS.   If he's converted to pitcher and does well that opens up a whole new world of opportunity for him.  If his HS coach is anything like our HS coach it won't be long before your 2019 is pitching.   

Last edited by MKbaseballdad

I agree that most college camps are pretty poor. However many of the camps from the elite power schools are pretty good.  The big three D1 here have great camp programs. I mean you are talking Mike Martin, Jim Morris and Kevin O'Sullivan and their staff along with scouts giving instruction.

 

TPM posted:

I agree that most college camps are pretty poor. However many of the camps from the elite power schools are pretty good.  The big three D1 here have great camp programs. I mean you are talking Mike Martin, Jim Morris and Kevin O'Sullivan and their staff along with scouts giving instruction.

 

Most colleges offer two kinds of camps - those for instruction and what they will bill as "prospect camps." I've never had my son at the former type, only the latter. The prospect camps generally aren't meant for instruction.

My experience may be different, but my 2018 hasn't attended prospect camp that didn't result in serious recruiting communications. All but one he attended blindly (without prior communication with coaches excepting that he emailed that he would be there and offered video/stats). However, I think this is only a workable situation if you have the kind of numbers that standout by class. I also have to admit that my son is 6' 4" and sits 86-87 so I'm not blind to the fact that these are particulars that not every kid at a camp offers.

roothog66 posted:
TPM posted:

I agree that most college camps are pretty poor. However many of the camps from the elite power schools are pretty good.  The big three D1 here have great camp programs. I mean you are talking Mike Martin, Jim Morris and Kevin O'Sullivan and their staff along with scouts giving instruction.

 

Most colleges offer two kinds of camps - those for instruction and what they will bill as "prospect camps." I've never had my son at the former type, only the latter. The prospect camps generally aren't meant for instruction.

My experience may be different, but my 2018 hasn't attended prospect camp that didn't result in serious recruiting communications. All but one he attended blindly (without prior communication with coaches excepting that he emailed that he would be there and offered video/stats). However, I think this is only a workable situation if you have the kind of numbers that standout by class. I also have to admit that my son is 6' 4" and sits 86-87 so I'm not blind to the fact that these are particulars that not every kid at a camp offers.

I wouldn't send my player to a prospect camp unless it made sense, perhaps junior year or senior year if not committed or signed as a senior.

roothog66 posted:
Originally Posted by TPM:
Originally Posted by bacdorslider:

I would not bother with any camps.... might go to a PG event... is he hitting 89 or sitting 89 ? big difference...  Also, learn from my mistakes, don't go and parade him around to every showcase and camp like I did with 2014...

 

That will just wear him thin and you'll end up wasting money... 

 

If he is a 2019 RHP topping 89  does he have control off off speed?  Where does he sit ?  what are the velo's on the off speed, How tall is he, what is his body type, projection.... these are the reasons they want to see him play, and they want to see him play in a game against like competition to see if he is a competitor, knows how to pitch ( for his age)  , they will watch him at a showcase and take your money but would rather see him play when it matters. 

 

The same is true if he is a third baseman... that velo is great across the infield but if you are on the corners you have to mash the ball.  You may not get a ball hit at you all game, but you will bat.

 

Poo poo the camps and showcases, except PG and get on a good travel team, work hard, send out your schedules , let your travel coach sell him.  Sit back and enjoy.

He never said that his son was a pitcher.  In another topic he said he was a catcher and 3B position player.  Here he stated that his velocity is 89 and posted his bat exit velocity.   

I asked if the velo came from the mound.

Probably hasn't answered me because I am in the wait until you play a HS game corner and I am not telling him what he wants to hear.

Why is everyone assuming the velo is from the mound? I want to know if he can pitch.

 

 

I made the same mistake. When you see a velo posted with no other stats, the only thought is usually pitching. That sort of changes everything. I would assume that's from third (if it's from F2, forget the commitments, he'll be in the show by the time he's 19). Impressive, but needs a bat to go along with it it's a useless number. If he were a SS it would be slightly different. I would also assume, though, if he's 89 across the diamond, he's got a good pop time from behind the dish.

Pop time soon to come . 

Back foot over rotating causing an unbalanced finish of the swing.  A normal cause is too early of an opening of the stride foot causing hips to open early, and whip the shoulders through and back foot follows with an over rotation. This results in a early release of power and produces an off balance swing.  

I'd spend the money to find a hitting instructor that can see this and correct it before I spent any money on any camp or showcase.  

Plan to then attend a regional college prospect camp in the fall of his soph year for the experience only.  It will help prepare for the camps the summer before his junior year.  If your son is advanced physically and has the advanced skills to match your son could get noticed.  It's likely your club program coach's can advise you about what they're seeing with your son's skill set and size.  Checking out Perfect Game profiles will assist you greatly.  

Continued skill development and strength/speed training are the best way for you to invest and support your son right now.  The journey of camps and showcases is expensive and can be unproductive if started too early.

My .02,

David

Good advice.  Get some good instruction vs camp, camp camp because you think some coach is going to take notice to a player that hasnt played one HS game.

Sometimes we tend to think that our bigger, and a slight bit older player is far above the rest because he dominates.  Then two or three years into HS many have caught up.  

2019 you need to sit back and let the process take over. How your sons skills match up to the rest of his class nationally rather than regionally is important.

Personally I wouldn't post any more videos if its to show off your sons skills because he does need to improve.

roothog66 posted:

Louisville has been one of the schools extremely active with 2018's so far.

Louisville is now an ACC school, within distances to SEC programs.  They have to recruit the very best in their region because of competition.  Not sure if recruiting that early proves anything other than you are up there trying to keep up with the Jones.  You have to show players you are all in.  

Most players do attend regional programs. Maybe 2019 is looking for an early commitment to a Midwest program. If so, attend all the camps you want, but if it were my son and the stud he feels he is, that's not going to help you get into one of the top elite programs in these country.

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