Well the time has come to finish up Pop up's baseball career, so many things to cover, not sure what forum is best. So for you old timers and you know who you are, you may want to bypass this lengthy post.
After 17 years of baseball, played in two countries and 23 states, son has moved on to Slow Pitch. I have thought about this experience both from parent and player perspectives and in the end I have some unanswered questions.
In order for some to gauge his skills at this game, I will provide a brief overview of his baseball credentials from HS on. Played all four years at HS, was on the Area Code team, did the big three showcases, East Cobb, Jupiter, and the Arizona Fall showcase. Played travel ball 3 of 4 years of high school. Had some interest by MLB scouts during HS.
Played four years of college ball, 2 at JC, one at D1, and one at the NAIA level. When college eligibility used up he came away with a paltry AA from JC, and no 4 year degree. Even though scholarships paid for most of tuition, we paid thousands in rent, gas, food, etc. He was just good enough to keep us hooked on the journey. His expectations were far from mine, he just wanted to play ball, I was hoping he would get a degree. In the end he got what he wanted, I did not. I feel animosity towards son because I don't think he ever had a goal other than play ball and took easy baseball/jock classes to keep his GPA up. I would not feel this way if all our efforts at least got him a degree.... Some may say it is our fault for not monitoring classes/effects of transfers.
Sorry, colleges pretty much treat the students as adults, I am unsure whether I would know what class is transferrable and not.
Now here is what I would do over, starting freshman year in HS:
Number one, get a handle what level son's passion is for the game, is he more into girls/video games or is asking for time with dad for catching, doing lessons?
Number two, if son is fully committed, find a way to measure his talent nationwide
Number three, for the video, hang out with buddies/girlfriend son, save the money and do not do travel ball. Legion ball is less expensive, with less travel costs, or for even more savings, skip summer ball altogether.
Number four, if son wants to continue ball after HS, go for local Junior college first. The upside is being able to attend most of the games, less travel costs for parents too.
Number five, don't buy into son's dream of playing pro, not gonna happen unless he has baseball bloodlines/superior talent.
As far as I am concerned, his good baseball ended after Freshman year of High School. Keep in mind, probably 90% of college players are shooting for the pros. 99% do not make it. In order to make the pros, baseball has to be number one in your life, you live and breathe it daily.
If you ask son, yes he had fun most of the time, made some good friends, saw a lot of the US. He would even tell you he is better prepared for the working world, we'll see how that goes.
My biggest question is, what was son really hoping for?