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I live in PA where there are pockets of very good legion ball (Boyertown as an example), but unfortunately that's not the case where I live. Legion is weak at best and travel ball has taken over. Legion in this area consists of 12-14 games and they mix junior and senior ages. So, an 8th grader can be batting against a 19 year old kid fresh out of college. They then have a tournament between the 4 teams and send the winner on to get pummeled by other areas.
My question is this: is it better for a player to go through the legion tryouts or the PG and showcase routes?
We have a coach in our area who insists that legion tryouts are the ONLY way a player will ever have a chance at playing at the next level (whatever that may be). He has stonewalled other attempts at forming a travel ball club to attend showcases tournaments and PG events. This is his sole reason for having a "league", I'm certain players can attend the latter events individually but most do so as part of the tournament experience and are usually playing their best ball then.
This is nothing against Legion ball, only it is a question concerning other options that may be better.
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It's your future.....take control of it.

Legion can provide some exposure if you make it far enough in the All Star tryout selection process.

I think perfectgame is worthy of your investment and I see nothing wrong with attending one of their showcases on an individual basis and not part of a group.

College Showcases can be the best bang for your buck if you do your homework and pick a college that has a wide variety of schools attending or some of the schools you want to target.

You can do any combination of the above. In my opinion the most important thing is to be honest with yourself about your talent level. Get some feedback from a trusted coach about where you might fit in the scheme of college baseball.
AABC, American Legion, Babe Ruth, Dixie, PONY, NABF and RBI do not send All Star teams made up of their alumni to participate in the Tournament of Stars Tournament.

A list is comprised by some shadow committee in cahoots with USA Baseball of players who will play wearing jerseys with the various organization names.

Avoid the NTIS also because it is for off year players who will be paying hundreds of dollars for a marginal (1 in 10,000) chance of making the tryout team.

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