My son is a 2009. Not a Div 1 caliber player yet, but sold D3 or maybe D2. We have been gong to some showcases this summer and he had generated some interest from local D3 school. They sent a questionaire which had to be filled out by the coach. We went to the Young-Harris showcase last week and as a prep to going, I had my son check out the schools that attended last year to see who offered his major, and then sent each one a letter stating his interest in their program, whether D1, 2, 3, or JUCO. He received a letter and questionaire back from U of Tenn. Like all of the advice that I see on this forum to never not respond to a coaches letter, I had him fill out his portion of the questionaire and take it to his HS coach to complete. The coach called him in and basically told him to stop dreaming. That he should stop thinking that he is better than he is. My son knows that he is not D1 material, but wants to go to a JUCO in in Georgia that has a good record of moving players up. They gave him a work out last week and seem very interested in him. So, he told my son he should concentrate on JUCO and D3 schools and basically stop wasting everybodies time everywhere else. My son told him that he was working on some things this off season, mainly speed, and his plans were to go to a JUCO to develop. He wanted to send the questionaire back because it was sent to him. When he wrote to U of T, he included his bio and stats for the summer, which included his 60 time (8.6). Where does this coach get off telling a kid to quit dreaming? Should I approach this coach and question his motives? We all know that my son is not the next Miquel Cabrera or Sammy Sosa, but I have always told my son that the only thing holding him back from getting ahead, was himself. Now a coach tells him this. He has great power for a young 17yo. Just turned Aug 8th. At YH they rated his power at the college level and hitting for avg and just below college level. That must mean something? I would like to know if anyone knows of a great player that maybe didn't develop until after HS or college.
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