Very few things that come to mind have not already been said, but here are those few:
1. Anyone who wants to get an evaluation with an eye towards joining our program should fill out the form on our web site, send me a private message, or otherwise contact us. We have no reason to get involved in your school's "politics," nor any other bias against any player that we come into this with. But to be clear, that is not a promise of a roster spot. You have to demonstrate a high level of talent and drive, and we also verify academics before a player gets to suit up for us.
2. The first thing you won't want to hear is, for every 100 parents who complain of "politics," maybe 1 has any genuine beef. The other 99 fall on the spectrum somewhere between someone having so much pride in their son that they are blinded to the reality of where he truly stacks up, or there is something else going on that perhaps the parent is not aware of. Hint: If you ask your son what's going on and he says "I dunno," in all likelihood he does know, he just doesn't want to tell you. Sometimes our sons' behavior in the locker room and the dugout is (a) not what we imagine and (b) not made known to us. As for you/your son, maybe you're that 1 in 100, but you should realize that when you talk of "politics," eyes start to roll. The best thing any parent can do in this situation is, not get involved and remain silent. Accept that the greater likelihood is that you are in the wrong in your evaluation.
And while I'm glad that your son got his chance to shine before last spring's season ended, one AB tells us all very little. For starters, if he's not a total stud hitter, he's not going to be the DH. So most of us have to play defense as well. We all have a tendency to focus on hitting and overlook or excuse defensive lapses ("bad hop" etc.), but if you have two guys who are comparable offensively and one of them is a liability on defense, the lineup card is not hard to fill out. Giving opposing teams a 4th or 5th out causes losses and drives coaches crazy.
3. There have been many players with talent in the King George program. FoxDad's son was one of them, I'm sure, and I also know that they had a kid get drafted out of high school there not so long ago. But the second thing you don't want to hear is that, in all candor, KG is not known as a program that puts 9 strong guys in the lineup day after day. If your # 8 and # 9 hitters are batting around .200, and you have to believe that the guys on the bench are not able to beat them out, then any kid who's not making the roster at all ... Well, let's just say that while injustices are sometimes done, that kid is probably not a collegiate prospect at any level.
On the Cardinals, we have definitely had strong players whose HS teams did not play them as much as their performances for us suggested was appropriate. Maybe they just fell into a spring slump? But all of them moved on to college ball at some level or another. To be honest, though, we've never had a kid who got totally cut from his HS team, or who didn't play at all, to make our roster. If there's a HS coach out there who's that clueless -- that he would have a collegiate-caliber player not even make the team -- I haven't run across him yet.