quote:
Originally posted by BOF:
I think it depends on the pool of players that a HS attracts. A typical HS (~2,400 kids)in our area attracts kids from 4 leagues (or more) so the starters on the Varsity team would play on any travel ball team in the country. (except maybe for a few "elite teams") Our summer HS team played in one tournament and beat all of the travel teams we played soundly. So in one sense just because you play on a travel team does not mean you are better than the next player.
If you lived in an outlying area that has a smaller pool of players to draw from then this would probably not be the case.
I don't see baseball going the way of s*o*cc*e*r where the HS team is not as important as the travel team. It is simply too popular at the HS level, whereas many don't care about the "s" sport. (at least here in the US)
That said playing for some kind of travel/scout team has become more important for kids to be seen at the next level. (as well as the whole show case phenomena)
BOF - great points. Just by reading the responses in this thread you can tell that not all high school situations are the same and thus one cannot generalize for all situations.
IMHO, there is much more to the high school situation than the hometown rah-rah stuff. I believe that high school baseball is often crucial or vital to the proper development of a ballplayer. With select or high end travel ball, there is a certain amount of choice or selection (by team and/or player) that goes into whether or not a player is on the team. A high end travel team will often court players they want on the team or players will seek them out and feel them out for their respective chances. Sometimes the competitive pressures are removed or mitigated by this process imho. In other words, a player can jockey around until they find a team they can play on. In some cases, all the players are high end college players, in other cases, players are the best a particular team can find. In some cases, a player is on the team because someone he knows started the team.
In many high school situations, this is the first time a player is forced to learn how to compete and deal with the circumstances as they are. The coach may not like your particular style. There may be other kids who are older and stronger. There may be a dozen different hurdles to overcome that are all out of the player's control. This is where they find out if they have the metal, the will, and the wherewithall to beat someone out. Learn how to perform under pressure. IMHO, pressure is having to perform or sit. If you are on a travel team and the coach already believes in your talent, I question whether a player feels the same type of pressure as in the competitive high school situation.
Our high school was kind of like the one BOF describes. Here it was a big deal to make the freshman team. A bigger deal to make JV the following year and a huge deal to start on varsity by the time you were a junior. We had multiple travel teams attending the same high school that was the largest one in a pretty big state. We had almost 4,000 kids in grades 10-12, where well over 100 kids tried out as freshman and most of them were travel ball players. I was frightened to death about what would happen for my son but thankful as he-ll looking back he was forced to go through that process. Obviously, some travel teams require a player to be more competitive than the respective high school teams but there are still unpredictable forces in the high school situation that players need to learn how to deal with and in many cases overcome.