Skip to main content

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Division 1 school (3200 students) So Cal
A Top rated baseball program.

My older son had around 60 players tryout as freshmen... That has been a typical number for this HS the last several years. That particular year 1 made varsity, 1 made JV and 18 made the freshman team. Of those, 3 were on Varsity as Sophmores, 7 as Juniors and 11 actually made it to the Varsity team as seniors... (which was very unusual, as typically only 5 or 6 make it that far) Four were drafted by the pros... Two of which signed out of HS. Four signed NLIs. Two of which are at D1 schools. One other walked on a D1 program and 4 are at a JC playing ball, and 2 I'm not sure about.

Now my youngest will be trying out as a new freshman Feb 18th, and I'll try to get a count.
Typically, the coach already know about a 1-2 dozen kids or so from his summer camp. Three separate LLs funnel players into this school, and so there are typically 25-40 kids who were LL All-stars as some point. These days at least 10-20 of the kids have played travel ball of some sort.
Last edited by SDBB
VA official start date is Feb 20. However, with that being President's Day (school holiday), there is no school. And our county does not allow practices/tryouts on school holidays, with a few exceptions (i.e. over winter/spring break, team still in playoffs).
Our school did have an informational meeting on Monday for prospective players. My son (a soph) said there were quite a few freshmen(20+) at the meeting.
We have a varsity and JV team at our school. About 18 players per team.
Last edited by jbbaseball
In my town, the freshman tryouts are seprete from the JV/V tryouts. The JV/V tryouts are sometime in mid march, pitchers and catchers come a week before. There probly going to be 10-15 kids trying out for JV that are freshmans, 3 maybe 4 will make it. Then anywheres from 50-80 will tryout for the freshman team. Im not sure how many kids are trying out for Varsity. But like I said JV and Varsity tryouts are together so a kid trying out for JV could end up on Varsity.
Last edited by rhbaseball
quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
It is not a matter of the number players who try out---it is more a matter of talent--if your son has the talent you can relax and enjoy


You r kidding right? Just trying to draw some response. It's not possible for a kid not to get selected that deserves so...

IMO there are always kids on the bubble that can go either way for a number of reasons.

sit back and relax...uh uh... throw up maybe
In our city, there are 6 high schools. One private, the other 5 public. The public ones range in size from about 1800 at two of them to 3500 kids at the largest two. Last year, one of those 3500 + high schools had 15 freshman on the freshman team. By the time the mid semester progress report came out, they were down to 6!!! Those guys had to either quit or get moved to JV..which they did, and they found spots BECAUSE 1/2 of the varsity had to sit out for grades, too!!! So the JV moved up into the varsity spots!! I couldn't believe it!!

Our private school has probably 300 kids, this year's freshman class has over 125 alone.. this school has a much smaller pond to choose from, but gets to play powerhouses like Oaks Christian and Malibu.
Because of changes in our school system, my son played freshman ball twice - 1st time as an 8th grader.

Year before last, our city had 1 high school of over 3000 students in grades 10-12 and 3 jr highs with grades 7-9. Each jr high had only one of each type of sports program (baseball, football, etc). Students in all 3 grades were allowed to try-out, but the teams did not play in NH's middle school circuit - they played at the high school freshman level. My son's jr high had 800 students, approximately half of which were boys. Eighy guys (20% of the male population of the school) tried out for the freshman team and the coach rostered 16 (13 freshman and 3 8th graders).

Last year, our second high school finally opened. Now we have 2 of the largest high schools in the state. Each has 2500 students in grades 9-12, and the jr highs have become middle schools (grades 5-8). The freshman teams are now at the high schools. Last year, 175 guys went out for baseball at South (the state's eventual Class L champion) and just over 100 at North. Freshman and sophomores tried out together and made up about 2/3's of all players. Each school fields frosh, jv and V teams with 15 players per roster.
quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
And who makes the determination as to who the so called "deserving" kids are?

The parents ???

I have very rarely seen a coach cut a kid who had talent and could help the team--perhaps it is just the parents of the kid who was cut who saw it that way


Coaches are not perfect, they screw over kids.
quote:
Originally posted by TRhit:
Darkmoon

Not saying it doesnt happen but usually is the way the parents see it because their son isnt starting or is cut.

I dont know too many coaches who intentionally screw kids over


I agree most coaches are decent people but they do have their favorites based on personality ect.Of course the parents in many times see their kid with rose colored glasses on but not in all cases.The coach does give some kids the shaft.More than likely its not intentional but a case where the coach has not given a kid his due respect for some reason.
At the parents meeting before workouts started the head coach told everyone that they make more mistakes at the 9th grade level than any other level.that good players fall through the cracks more at this level than any.they realize this when they see these kids on travel teams throughout the summer and the next season at tryouts!
TR,,,
FYI...
My point was about your comment about not having too worry, not about the coach not selecting properly.

My son is in his Senior year and up this year I always worried, because you just never know, especially for underclassman at a large school which in theory will draw from a larger talent pool leaving some kids on the outside looking in.
Numbers can be stagering sometimes depending on where you are. I do not remember what the numbers were when my son was a freshman, but I do remember the numbers when he was a sophomore.

98 kids tried out for (8) Varsity slots. 26 Players total on Varsity and 26 on JVs. So basically there were (18) returning players for Varsity from the previous year. On JVs, there were no upper-classmen; so if you did not make the Varsity team as a Junior your HS playing days were over.

O42
Our tryouts are the 27th. Predicted anywhere from 60-80 kids at the tryouts, but it may thin down real quick because if you're not at the weight training program it cuts down on you real bad. Plus sophomores are looking for some guys at our school. I got my work cut out for me trying to prove myself at such a big school (950-1000 kids just freshman). Good thing I've been practicing (even more than some of the seniors).

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×