If I remember...and I'm probably wrong....doesn't NAIA have 12.7 scholarships for Varsity? Don't they also have a pot of money for JV? I know they have a different set of rules than the average bear.
Different set of rules for sure, but that part isn't much different than the D1 11.7 and D2 9. You may be missing the intended message.
While I agree 97 players would be a WOW concept, in your scenario there were 57 players. 12 are red shirted, so really 45 players. They have a V and a JV team, let's assume 23 on each team. If NAIA has 12.7 scholarships for Varsity that could be a 50% scholarship per kid right? If JV has a similar pot.....
Okay I guess I am missing the intended message because it doesn't sound bad to me at all. Is it playing time? I know 14u teams that have 25 kids on them, so the number of people on the team REALLY doesn't sound bad. Can you spell out the message for us naive folks? (And that was not said in a snide way, I honestly don't get the message.)
CaCO,
Joe covered a lot of things pretty well. The primary message is, as others have also said, go in with eyes wide open.
Most HS players (and their parents) that actively go through the recruiting process are not aware of some of the motivating factors behind the objectives of the RC and HC to get them to come to their school. Most HS players who actively go through the recruiting process are spending a great deal of time and money (mostly parents' money), are making a significant commitment and many sacrifices throughout their HS years because they think they want to play college baseball. If successful, they are about to take the leap into an even much deeper level of commitment. Very few of those players have the vision or goal to go through all that to play on a JV squad at a small private school that has five dates on their schedule. Sometimes, those games are against a JC program or, worse yet, a college club program where the players may be committing about 10% of the amount of time and money toward baseball as compared to that college player. And, even though that player ends up on the bottom half of that huge roster or mostly on JV, they are still required to put in the same sacrifice and commitment as the twelve position players actually seeing the field. They are still out of the work force and social scene that other college students are afforded, and still struggle to put sufficient time toward their studies.
Many of these small private schools use athletics as one of the primary drivers of enrollment, often with student athletes comprising close to half of the total. Clearly, it benefits the school to have large rosters of athletes paying some significant portion of tuition.
Of course, the coaches want good players. They want a winning team. They love the game and want to compete. They are going to try to get the best players they can. But there is also likely pressure from administration to compete so that they can draw more students, so they can get more tuition. Bigger rosters means more tuition. Do you think those coaches WANT to manage a roster of 50+ players? Even if redshirted, there is still participation, reps, personal problems, paperwork, etc. Often, those that play JV are still involved in some level with the V squad. As example, If there are five small privates in the region, they are often all competing for the same regional athletic and academic talent. If one school is appealing and they can carry a big roster, they effectively lower the quality of good players available to their four regional competitors - on the field and at the tuition turnstile.
These are some of the things recruits must be aware of... eyes open. They will (hopefully) encounter RC's who will compliment them, pay them attention and try to get them to come to their school, to their program. They will tell them some version of "we think you can compete for a spot". What does that mean? Where, more specifically, do they see the player fit and why? What is the school's history with players such as you? All that work. That commitment. That dream. Is it realistic here or am I forking over tens of thousands of $, working my A$$ off for another four years and playing five dates of JV ball at the local HS field? Or, one of two other less-than-ideal scenarios - lost in a sea of 90 fall roster guys and cut in December or kept at the bottom depths of a large roster, never to see the field. At these schools with huge rosters, simple math will dictate that more fall into one of these undesirable categories than those that will see playing time and contribute.
OK, after painting that bleak picture, believe it or not, I will say that I am a HUGE fan of college baseball. I embrace the opportunity to help my players find a place to play and get their education. But I try my best to help them look in the right places and ask the right questions - to have eyes wide open... and trying to do a little of the same for everyone here.
That's the message.