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Hi. It would be helpful if someone could inform me on some Juco baseball schools on the east cost, preferably New England or anything Northeast. I'm looking for a school that is a good place to develop skills for baseball and academically. It would be nice if it was a school that's on the radar as far as scouts and D1 coaches go as well. I'm looking for a competitive place to play and a school that has a great program. Again, in the location that I specified. Any info would be great. Thanks.

 

 
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UConn Avery Point is a JuCo with a historically good baseball program. Bunker Hill CC (MA) has a very well connected coach. He moved there a couple of years ago to rebuild the program. Gloucester CC (NJ) is a good program. One of the posters here has a son who went there. I'm not well versed in JuCos. I just know of these three from knowing kids who attended.

My son went to Gloucester CC junior college in southern New Jersey as RJM mentioned. He went there because of the reputation of the program and the coach. They are a D-3 juco that goes to the world series every year. Many of their players are 4 year D-1 guys who don't have the grades or didn't like the situation at there 4 year schools.

 

The program and coach's reputation get these players. The reputation also brings out the 4 year school recruiters. Most of the starters each year go on to play at D-2 and D-1 schools. Four of last year's players are now playing at Lynn in Florida and one was drafted in the 7th round. My son is playing his second year at Newberry College in SC.

 

You have to be a pretty good player to start at Gloucester. The coach almost turns over the roster yearly. He brings in players in the middle of the year and is always looking for the best available players.

@K9 posted:

Many of the kids in the New England area do a post grad year at a private prep school.  I'd imagine that eats into the number of Juco programs up there.

I am curious about this. Can you say more?

Like, why would a post grad year be popular in one area of the country but not others? Is it weather? The fact that more PG  programs exist there? Do HS/club coaches encourage? Do colleges recommend it for certain players? Is it because the cutoff age for kindergarten is later in the Northeast so many HS grads are younger than their counterparts elsewhere?

Thanks.

Last edited by SpeedDemon

My guess is there are more of these private schools in the northeast than other areas, but that is just a guess.

When I played Ivy football many years ago about 10% of the players had been post grads at Andover, Deerfield, BB&N, etc.  It was common during recruiting for a coach to advise a kid who was on the border academically to do an extra year.  In my recollection the financial aid was generous for athletes.

More recently, when my son played for a travel team in New England I saw that parents were very strategic about the use of these schools.  Many times kids wait to see what offers they are getting as juniors and then transfer to do senior year plus a grad year to extend the recruiting window.  We even know a kid who started at public school, transferred to a private school, accepted a great offer as a sophomore and then transferred back to public school.

Worth mentioning that these schools are very prestigious academically and probably enhance a kid's chances of acceptance at any college.

If you want to significantly reduce your time by more than 70%, then you might want to check out CBI JUCO Pipeline Dashboard.

You can look at historical trends as far back as 2017.

In totality, CBI is more accurate with respect to transfer data than the 1700 individual school's website

As the 2024 season starts and the  spring rosters of the 4yr schools are available, CBI will publish and reconcile all transfers.

Currently, the 2024 JUCO Pipeline insights are based on 2023 fall rosters, for those schools that published their rosters, we've cleaned them up by finding who transferred in.

This includes:

NCAA-D1 - 288 of 305 schools

NCAA-D2 - 219 of 250 schools

NAIA  - 138 of 196 schools

We've published NCAA-D3 - 123 of 386 schools, they normally don't record where players transfer from, thus we have to hunt for the answers.  We are holding off on reconciling until next month.

Northeastern schools normally published their rosters late february/early march

@SpeedDemon posted:

I am curious about this. Can you say more?

Like, why would a post grad year be popular in one area of the country but not others? Is it weather? The fact that more PG  programs exist there? Do HS/club coaches encourage? Do colleges recommend it for certain players? Is it because the cutoff age for kindergarten is later in the Northeast so many HS grads are younger than their counterparts elsewhere?

Thanks.

There are big regional differences with many things but none more than with JuCo baseball. In warm weather states the level of JuCo baseball is just way better than in the Northeast. That has to have a lot to do with it.

@adbono posted:

There are big regional differences with many things but none more than with JuCo baseball. In warm weather states the level of JuCo baseball is just way better than in the Northeast. That has to have a lot to do with it.

We (P5) scrimmaged a NE juco "power" one fall. After the first few arms there wasn't anything too impressive. It was pretty lopsided game. Other son's school (competitive mid major) scrimmaged them the next year and it was a similar result. We were pretty good but nowhere near a top 25 team. Top NE jucos probably resemble a strong D3, lower level D1 program.

I think a lot of the regional differences have to do with the general snobbish attitudes towards jucos in the NE. Obviously there is more talent in the southern states where a combination of quantity of talented players, less D2s/D3s, and a more tolerant attitude towards college choice make such a difference in the level of the schools in different regions.

@PABaseball posted:

We (P5) scrimmaged a NE juco "power" one fall. After the first few arms there wasn't anything too impressive. It was pretty lopsided game. Other son's school (competitive mid major) scrimmaged them the next year and it was a similar result. We were pretty good but nowhere near a top 25 team. Top NE jucos probably resemble a strong D3, lower level D1 program.

I think a lot of the regional differences have to do with the general snobbish attitudes towards jucos in the NE. Obviously there is more talent in the southern states where a combination of quantity of talented players, less D2s/D3s, and a more tolerant attitude towards college choice make such a difference in the level of the schools in different regions.

The important question is "Does the JUCO have a good pipeline?"

For the 2023 season, Harford (D1 Region 20) had 39 alumni at 4 yr school(s).



19 were on NCAA-D1 Rosters





Harford_2023_Juco_Insights_JUCO_Pipeline



Harford_2023_Juco_Insights_JUCO_Pipeline_Details[2)

20 players from their 2022 team moved on to 4 yr schools



Harford_2023_Player_attrition_Outgoing_Player

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  • Harford_2023_Juco_Insights_JUCO_Pipeline
  • Harford_2023_Juco_Insights_JUCO_Pipeline_Details(2)
  • Harford_2023_Player_attrition_Outgoing_Player

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