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I am curious to hear from others if there kids college team spends more time on intra squad games during the fall season. You get ~~23 kids standing around for a couple of hours with limited reps. I would have expected much more focus on drills, with competitive 'games' built in. Makes no sense to me to waste all that valuable time to get better. Limit the games to a couple and get the competitive juices amped up for them. I did talk to one player and his team's fall world series is scored on 7 categories, not just W/L per game. I thought that was a great idea. Love to hear what other see out there.

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Let’s do some math. For the sake of discussion let’s say your school will carry a 35 man roster in the fall. Let’s also say that you have 25 players returning from last year’s team. Your new recruiting class contains 15 freshmen and 5 JuCo transfers. You also have brought in 5 players from the transfer portal. So that’s 25+15+5+5 = 50 players in the fall that are hoping to be part of the 35 man spring roster. That means 15 players will be cut at the end of the fall and coaches need to decide who will be kept and who will be let go based on in game performance. Not drill work. That’s why they play so many intrasquad games. Fall ball is an extended tryout. Half the roster has not made the team when they show up on campus. This is what many people don’t seem to understand.

I assume you're talking about D1? There are rules that dictate the amount of hours a team can practice as a team. I think at this level players should have the baseball IQ and abilities to to improve their individual skills on their own. When I say on their own, because of the rules a good part of the fall is spent on indies. Unfortunately if you're relying on the coaches to make your kid better, that's not the case at a lot of schools. For example I've seen the off season pitching programs several schools have given their players that are basically a vanilla NPA program (the holds are a giveaway). I know of one school that completely outsources their pitching instruction.

Hope for the best. Plan for the worst.

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