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Here is the sitch...Our HS field butts up to a park that contains a few fields operated by our local park district for PONY and travel teams.  We were walking by the field used by the 13Us and a kid was arguing with his dad over something.  Didn't quite get the entire conversation but I did figure out that it was over looking good uniform/equipment-wise vs being practical. Obviously the kid was trying to look good but it was not practical for game play.  My son looked at me and reminded me of a situation a few years back where we got into a similar argument.  

 

My son was 13U and was pitching.  We were playing on a turf field which allowed spikes.  As this is the big year for kids to wear metal spikes they are the in cool you need to have them spikes for the kids to wear.  The pitchers mound was a portable mound and did not handle spikes well.  My kid was slipping all over the place.  He came into the dugout and would not listen to reason from myself or the other coaches.  He kept insisting he knew better and he needed to wear the spikes.  Finally after walking two kids the next inning one of the coaches convinced him he needed to put on turf or tennis shoes.  Unfortunately he did not bring his shoes to the game.  He wore flip flops.  At this point Im pretty pi$$ed off from his attitude and basically took off my shoes (we were both size 12s at this point) and threw them out of the dugout onto the field for him to put on.  My kid made the comment to me, as we walked by this, that it actually took him until his Frosh year in HS that looking good doesn't matter if it hurts your game play.   

 

We laugh about this now but at the time we probably didn't talk for an hour after the game.  BTW I have since matured.  

 

Anyway, Im sure others have had incidents where their kid would have rather looked good playing the game then be practical.  Throw them out here if you have them. 

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Gotta love kids, and it doesnt end at 13 under

 

My son is a sophomore in college, and last year, he was looking to buy Oakley sunglasses.  Mind you he is a PO, so do sunglasses really matter?  Of course.

 

So we are looking at them, and he happens to have his cap on.  He puts a pair on the front of his cap, then on the rear of his caps and looks back at how they look.  Says I like these.  I ask if he wants to try them on his face.  He says, nope they're good.

 

Yes, I had that conversation with a 19 year old.  A year later, I still dont know if I have seem them on his face.

Originally Posted by Mizzoubaseball:

Gotta love kids, and it doesnt end at 13 under

 

My son is a sophomore in college, and last year, he was looking to buy Oakley sunglasses.  Mind you he is a PO, so do sunglasses really matter?  Of course.

 

So we are looking at them, and he happens to have his cap on.  He puts a pair on the front of his cap, then on the rear of his caps and looks back at how they look.  Says I like these.  I ask if he wants to try them on his face.  He says, nope they're good.

 

Yes, I had that conversation with a 19 year old.  A year later, I still dont know if I have seem them on his face.


Hah! My kid just HAD to have a pair of Oakleys this year. After a few day games in the outfield I asked him where they were. "Oh," he replies, "I don't like to wear sunglasses."

Originally Posted by Mizzoubaseball:

Gotta love kids, and it doesnt end at 13 under

 

My son is a sophomore in college, and last year, he was looking to buy Oakley sunglasses.  Mind you he is a PO, so do sunglasses really matter?  Of course.

 

So we are looking at them, and he happens to have his cap on.  He puts a pair on the front of his cap, then on the rear of his caps and looks back at how they look.  Says I like these.  I ask if he wants to try them on his face.  He says, nope they're good.

 

Yes, I had that conversation with a 19 year old.  A year later, I still dont know if I have seem them on his face.

I often make the comment about kids on my son's team (including my son) and their pretty $200 hatbands. That's all those Oakleys are for most players (including mine!). The only time they put them on is after they've made a stupid error because they were blinded by the sun! SMH

In high school my son had to have Oakleys to wear above his visor. As polite, humble and subdued as my son was he had "cool" nailed like gymnast scoring a ten. At about fourteen I told my son about Mel Hall wearing batting gloves in both back pockets. It was so his pockets could wave "bye" to the ball as he was rounding the bases. The next game I noticed my son had gloves in both pockets. It surprised me junior year when he stopped wearing batting gloves. It's not cool. It's old school. Yet my son would never push the pant legs up. They were always down.

 

This whole thing must have been genetic. When I was in high school I wore white spikes. I would have my mother tailor the uniform just right. I had her cut and extend the stirrups so only the strips on the side showed.

We have the Oakleys as well.  I bought the first pair which he sold to a friend after the season to buy the "better" pair off of one of his teammates who was giving up baseball.  The difference?  Nope not the frames, or the color.  His friends set had 4 different lenses and we only had one.  I will say its been 4 years since this happened and he still has the glasses.  Actually wears them during the game when the sun is in his face.  I don't think I have ever seen him change out the lenses.

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