Just noticed that a SEC school who has a Club Baseball team has two rosters for this spring: A D1 Roster and a D2 Roster.
Is this common? What's the difference? Is this like varsity and JV for the club teams?
Just noticed that a SEC school who has a Club Baseball team has two rosters for this spring: A D1 Roster and a D2 Roster.
Is this common? What's the difference? Is this like varsity and JV for the club teams?
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@Francis7 posted:Just noticed that a SEC school who has a Club Baseball team has two rosters for this spring: A D1 Roster and a D2 Roster.
Is this common? What's the difference? Is this like varsity and JV for the club teams?
You must have a lot of time on your hands. Here is the website for club baseball
I say keep em coming or I will be forced to continue commenting on Swanson hungryman TV dinners.
@adbono posted:Once they are on your mind it’s a hard thing to shake. I apologize for planting the seed.
Well since you bought this up...I am debating with myself if there was 2 hungryman salisbury steak dinner. I thought there was one with the corn and brownie (the one I loved) or the peas and apple pie (meh). I could be confusing it with the fired chicken meal another one of my faves.
My alma mater has 3 levels of club ice hockey for the men, and 1 for the women. They call the men's teams D1, D2, D3, and they play in difference conferences. All players try out for the D1 team first. Those not chosen tryout for D2, etc.
Club sports have certainly come a long way. My understanding of club sports when I was in school, (otherwise known by my kids as when the dinosaurs roamed) was usually a sport that was maybe in existence in your schools conference, (ie hockey in the big 10) but your school didn't have an NCAA team in the sport, so some students would get together, create a club team and play the other schools in the area that also didn't have an NCAA school team.
I actually played a year of club hockey after baseball was done for me. Tryouts were not a thing, and all I did was go with a buddy to a practice, skate with the team and borrowed enough spare gear to play the next week. I had never played anything more than pond hockey in my hockey crazy home town before that.
@old_school posted:
Plastic tray? What are you, 30?
This is the one from my era. The best part was that I didn't have to wait for dessert (I ate that brownie first). Of course, there was a price to pay for such decadence... that brownie was 500 degrees right out of the oven.