If your kid had to choose between one or the other, which one would provide your HS kid the best opportunity (recruiting wise) to play at the college level?
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It's the only game in the spring. Playing for the school and the community is special. While it's not a deal stopper a college coach would want to know why a player didn't play. I don't think "politics" and "it isn't good ball" would be good answers.quote:why bother with it if there are other options
My son plays to win. I'll bet every poster's kid on this site plays for the same reason.quote:I guess you play hs ball strictly for fun.
quote:Originally posted by downandout:
High School Ball, at least where we are is nothing more than an extended spring training. Summer ball is when competitive baseball begins. All HS ball in our town is about is politics. Yes I know its everywhere but why bother with it if there are other options. I guess you play hs ball strictly for fun. Play as much select as you can and remember its all about results. good luck
quote:High School Ball, at least where we are is nothing more than an extended spring training. Summer ball is when competitive baseball begins. All HS ball in our town is about is politics. Yes I know its everywhere but why bother with it if there are other options. I guess you play hs ball strictly for fun. Play as much select as you can and remember its all about results. good luck
quote:Originally posted by Blprkfrnks:
My problem with these travel/select programs being described is that money becomes the big factor. We have players that can barely afford to pay the small amounts of money necessary to play at our high school. They will never afford the luxory of playing for a top travel or select team.
It's already happened. The college coaches are busy coaching in the spring. If they get to a high school game it's only going to be a local game that doesn't conflict with their job. There may only be one or two players worth seeing at the game. The coaches are at the showcases in the summer and the fall when coaches have far more time. They can see hundreds of kids. Any high school player who's not an absolute stud who's waiting to be seen at a high school game is going to have a long wait.quote:Originally posted by OCB:
Now this makes me sad to say, but I think travel ball by the time my son reaches high school age will be where most baseball players seeking college scholarships will be recruited from.
quote:Usssa is now offering more and more showcase tournaments with other organizations trying to follow suit. More and more high school/ college coaches are now starting stellar programs within Usssa and other organizations.
I think you're a little crazed, err, overenthusiastic on this one. There are high school teams the 14U teams could beat, but not a good one. Seventeen and Eighteen year olds are too physically and emotionally maturity for most fourteen year olds. I'd say top end 16U teams could beat many high schools except those with the stud 18U pitchers.quote:At last years Elite 24 Usssa World Series in the 14u age bracket. The top 6 teams from that tournament at 14u would wipe the floor with 95% of the high school teams out there.
You can't compare an 18U team that can recruit from anywhere with a high school team restricted by district boundaries. I don't doubt my son's travel team could beat his high school team. Most of his high school team couldn't make his travel team.quote:The 17-18 yr old Chet Lemon Juice Travel team would give some of the best high school programs in the country a run for their money.
This isn't baseball. This is professional coach's ego stroking. How good does a coach have to be if he can pay to fly in the best talent available. How can "the team" feel like they won anything? They're not a team. What about the players who are thrown under the bus by the coach for the flown in studs? The winning coach should win free psychiatric counseling. After all, it's about him, not the team.quote:A lot of these elite programs dont just pull kids from their local area. These elite programs fly kids in from all over the country to play for their teams. Here is a sick but true example. A 10u now 11u team pays its head coach 60k a year and the 2 asst coaches 40k a year and flys kids in from all over to play for them every weekend.
No one is asking. It's already happened.quote:Now if this is going on at the youth level what do you think is happening at the high school level of travel ball. So I ask you, if you were a college recruiter and considering the times of the year that these teams play, where would you spend your budget dollars going on recruiting trips.