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My son is a Class of 2021 who is committed to a southern D2 program. He is a LHP, 6’6” 220lbs and currently tops at 88 and consistently 86 with a lot of movement and in the zone. Coaches anticipate he will be over 90 by the spring once he makes some adjustments. We were at a showcase today and a MLB area scout gave him his card and told him he had a facility in the area that he could train at and to give him a call. This is the second scout (different organizations) in the last year that has approached and offered this.  The first time he was unable to do it because of the distance from the facility and the conflict with school. Does this mean that they have some interest in him? I would think so since I’m sure they have other things to do. My sons not sure how to proceed. Any insight is appreciated.

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@Iowamom23 posted:

On a related note — what are the stages of interest for the draft vs. college recruiting?

In normal times, scouts would have been out  last season then in summer watching and reporting. In fall, schools have scout day, where the coaches get a chance to watch and talk to the players they are interested in.

I don't know the situation now, if scouts are allowed to come watch, as most campuses are closed to outsiders.

The good part is that the draft is now in July.  That gives the scouts time to watch a bit longer.

Hopefully life may be back to a normal or probably a new normal.

EDIT:  Son never met or spoke to his drafting scout. 

Last edited by TPM

@Iowamom23 I would add that the stages are more fluid since there are so many point of entry (after HS, after junior year [or sophomore yr if you are 20]), after senior yr, or any year if you are going to JUCO). Area Scouts don't care when a kid develops into a possible prospect, just that they have displayed a tool or two to show that they ARE a possible prospect. Once that happens, it is their job to start following and to develop a relationship. And some teams are digging into numbers even younger. There was a work out with metrics in my area for one team that invited HS kids as young as freshmen.

So son had a number of scouts showing up for games this summer. Scouts reached out asking for days he would pitch Now he's getting lots of questionnaires from various teams. Iowa is working on plans for a scout day this fall, assuming we can get our statewide case counts down below Canada's before the snow flies.

How do you know when you cross the line from "here's a kid who might not suck, let's keep an eye on him?" to "this is a kid we might want to give some money to in the near future?'

 

@Iowamom23 posted:

How do you know when you cross the line from "here's a kid who might not suck, let's keep an eye on him?" to "this is a kid we might want to give some money to in the near future?'

 

Unless the player is expected to be a very high pick, you dont know. 

When son was at Clemson, once season began scouts could not talk to the players as per HC. I think there was communication with pitching coach. We never spoke to any scout. I don't know what went on with his advisor/agent because rules were different back then.

At FAU, we sit behind the scouts. I have seen a scout talk to a parent once.  Again, unless its a top round, there usually wont be any discussion between scouts and parents.   So you really don't know until draft day. If the player wants to get drafted, he will work hard enough to try to make it happen.  I think a lot has to do with scout/coach relationships.

JMO

Last edited by TPM

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