I, for one, think this is an excellent topic for discussion. I attended several showcase events with my youngest son, four of which were PG rating events. We also attended three MLB scouting combines where players were rated. Given the assumptions made in the first post "strong team but not nationally ranked" and "juniors only" I am convinced that for the 8.5 and above PG rating or the higher level MLB ratings, a player with that type evaluation should be a varsity starter on any team in the country [unless, of course, high school politics takes precedence over talent]. The reason being, you don't see to many of them, it is usally a player that really stands out to everyone and the odds are astronomical that there would be eight other position players or 5 starting pitchers anywhere in the country on our hypothetical strong but unranked high school baseball team where ALL would be rated that high. If there is, something is going on during the recruiting phase that would smell very fishy to me or the coach can't take the highest high quality players and get nationally ranked.
That being said, when you get below 8.5, again based on my experience, you start to get a lot more players at the showcase evaluated at 7.0, 7.5 & 8.0. There could certainly be strong high quality high school programs in the country where a player within that rating range might not even make the high school team. There will be other high schools, maybe not so strong, where that same player will be the team MVP, first team all state and will be selected by the coaches as the conference Player of the Year. So many of the players in that rating zone have different strengths and weaknesses and the coach may have particular needs that need to be filled. There are just so many variables at play here. So my final answer to the initial question of CADad is this: Junior high school baseball players ranked 8.5 and above by PG or equivilant should be no lower than varsity starters and the MVP of strong but nationally unranked teams around the country. Junior high school basebll players ranked 7.0 to 8.0 by PG or equivilant could be anywhere from cut from the team to MVP.
However, since the discussion has shifted somewhat away from the initial question to high school starters/non-starters and playing in college, I would like to offer a few opinions of my own on this very different subject. Fungo, old friend, you made a VERY BOLD statement. If I may rephrase, you are saying that a player should not even pursue playing college baseball if he is not a starter on varsity as a high school junior. If you are talking about the "average" or below average high school teams in the country, I might agree with you. If you are talking about the high school teams to which CADad is referring [strong teams but not nationally ranked], I am unable to agree with you in all cases. And if you are including in that statement, say the top 25 high school teams in the nation, I definitely cannot agree with you.
Here are some reasons why I believe what I am saying. 1) There is so much disparity in the talent level/depth at the high schools across the country based on area of the country, size of school, availability of good pre-high school training/development programs, expertise and interest of coaches at all levels, etc; 2) There are so many oportunities to play college baseball at so many different levels of competition [DI, DII, DIII, NAIA, JUCO] and each college is looking for that student/athlete balance that best fits in to their program and school; 3) Politics, coaching incompetence, do exist on the high school level providing pretenders with the opportunity to play while talented players sit the bench or are not even allowed to make the team; and, finally; 4) the emphasis of most talent evaluators on size, arm strength and power potential to the detriment of other talents such as speed, quickness, defensive range and baseball smarts; not necessarily because they can't or don't want to measure that given enough time and context but because the showcase/tryout events are not able to evaluate the other factors as easily. A college camp provides the best opportunity to showcase these under evaluated talents because of the time available and the smaller numbers but it is not without its flaws.
However, everyone still needs to understand that we have at the highest levels of baseball today a debate over what combination of talent set has value and what does not. As one example of that debate, the importance or lack of importance of the ability to produce high on base percentage and slugging percentages vs high batting average and more home runs. Which statistics best measure a players "talent" or, perhaps a more important point adds "value" to the team?
I am not trying to start a debate on this particular subject here in this forum. By pointing to that diverse combination of skill sets, I am suggesting that there are college coaches on both sides of that debate and if a young man's talent is that he hits a lot of doubles & triples and gets on base frequently, he might not play for a high school coach or a college coach only interested in batting average and home runs but a different college coach might be VERY INTERESTED in that young man playing for him.
Depending on travel team availability, money and politics showcasing/tryouts may be the only chance for some players to demonstrate their talent outide their area. Although I agree that we here on the HSBBW should not encourage false hope in the young men and families that read these forums neither should we counsel forgoing the dreams of young men and their families based solely on the whim and caprice of a particular high school coach whom we know nothing about.
My advice to a player interested in playing college baseball and the parents interested in assisting him with his dream is don't give up automatically because the high school coach thinks he has no talent. Ask knowledgable baseball people in the area and, if you have the money, take him to a PG or equivalant scouting combine and talk to them afterwards. If you get some encouragement, search for the college and baseball program that is right for him. And good luck from all of us at HSBBW.
TW344