Skip to main content

Son plays first base for his school.  6 ft, 155lbs.  Last showcase was timed at 6.75 for the 60, good fielder, hitter, pitches.  From what little I know, he doesn't project as a first baseman in college.  He appears to "fit" CF better, yet he doesn't get many reps in the outfield.   Where I live, off season you play with your school team, and hence he continues to play 1st and pitch.   This summer was the first time we went to showcases and he mainly played those 2 positions, did well, but I dont think he standout (relative to other first baseman, he was small, had average exit velo, average power, etc.).  I feel like he would standout and be recognized as a potential college player at CF (but if he were to play there at these tournament/showcases he would have very little practice at that positon before going).  What is the general advice for showcase and travel tournament play, play where you are most comfortable because you practice there every day every week or play where you fit best according to the measurables and coaches may better be able to picture you playing at the college level?  Side note, he says he enjoys both first, P and CF, he'll go wherever the coach/team needs him.

Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

You don’t want to showcase as a first baseman unless you look like and hit like a masher. College first baseman are typically either mashers who may have played catcher, first, third or left field when being recruited, a player that didn’t win his recruited position or a player who can hit but is dinged up and can’t cover his normal position. 

Last edited by RJM

BballHS, he hasn't been able to play both positions in school, they only have him at 1st and pitcher.  In practice he can try to take some OF reps, but not if it interfered with IF reps.  With travel teams and showcases,  we have had him play his primary position but I'll probably start listing CF as his primary, even though he has a very rudimentary skill set there.  I just need to get him more reps there.

It's not enough to just be fast to play CF. You have to run efficient routes to the ball, be able to make all the catches(including the dreaded line drives that are either short, or over your head),  have a good arm with excellent OF technique, and  get great jumps on balls.

 

 It is one of the most important defensive positions on the field. Playing 1st and P does not prepare you for it. Make sure he takes hundreds of OF balls before he goes to a showcase as an OF.

 

Oh, and you didn't mention his P measurables. Teams always need Pitching. If he is a good pitcher, then it makes sense for him to be a 1B on his off days from pitching, as the demands on the arm are far less there.

Last edited by 57special

57, I agree, hence my original question as to how to approach these showcase/tournements.   It's a risk to put him in CF, but at the same time, I'm not sure schools can see him as a first baseman or pitcher.  Pitching measurables, FB mid 70's. Curve and his best pitch, change up.  Played JV as a freshman (measurables here dont matter but they were good).  He is very effective because he can mix up all 3 pitches and control them well enough.  

To add to 57’s comments even though my son was a CF’er we spent hours on the field with me hitting long gappers, line drive gappers, line drives straight at him, in front of him and straight over his head. We worked on charge, scoop and throw on base hits at him, to his right and his left. We did this often until he ran out of gas.

We used a bag of balls. After each play he tossed the ball against the fence until the bag was empty. On the base hits he flipped the balls towards second base. I didn’t want him making a lot of throws.

An outfielder has to develop natural reactions for a quick break on the ball and taking the correct route. 

Last edited by RJM

As a 2022, what positions on the HS team are graduating this year? Pitching measurables tell me that as a P, likely an "innings eater." Scouts told son early on that his speed would be his calling card. 6.75 for a sophomore is pretty good. You didn't indicate if "running ' (stealing bases) is part of 2022Grad's game. Position really isn't relevant for that. Son played against a team this summer whose catcher was team's leading base stealer, and he had a good % of success rate. As other posters have indicated, profile doesn't match 1b. My son once had a teammate who played CF, and could also play 1B if needed. Much better than being a 1B, who can spot in CF.

Another question is if 2022grad could play MI. I would probably say get reps at CF; In the showcase settings skill sets usually consist of 5-7 balls hit to you. I have seen some showcases where all outfielders line up in RF also. As an aside, son played 3B in high school most of his junior year, where he neither fit the profile defensively (too much range to have fewer chances than MI) nor hitting (contact hitter). His Legion team (and showcases) he played MI and CF. Where does your son usually hit in the lineup?

Son was HS SS. Recruited as MIF. Didn’t have an IF spot open as a freshman so DH. Crowded IF as a sophomore, so he won the CF spot. He never played OF with any regularity before this. He can run, and knowledgeable coaches always said that was his spot (CF).  We had similar concerns, but he was able to convert, once someone took the time to train him. It has to be worth the coach’s while to make the change. Worthwhile=one of the top 9 hitters.  Be a hitter. 

3and2Fastball posted:
RoadRunner posted:
3and2Fastball posted:

A 2022 running a 6.75 will get recruited as an OF if he can hit even a little... Get that down to 6.5 and practically have your pick of schools

Not true for D1. 

There is a spot at most D1's for a 6.5 runner who can hit a little, absolutely

Does your kid run a 6.5, and that’s been your personal experience?

Ripken Fan posted:

As a 2022, what positions on the HS team are graduating this year? Pitching measurables tell me that as a P, likely an "innings eater." Scouts told son early on that his speed would be his calling card. 6.75 for a sophomore is pretty good. You didn't indicate if "running ' (stealing bases) is part of 2022Grad's game. Position really isn't relevant for that. Son played against a team this summer whose catcher was team's leading base stealer, and he had a good % of success rate. As other posters have indicated, profile doesn't match 1b. My son once had a teammate who played CF, and could also play 1B if needed. Much better than being a 1B, who can spot in CF.

Another question is if 2022grad could play MI. I would probably say get reps at CF; In the showcase settings skill sets usually consist of 5-7 balls hit to you. I have seen some showcases where all outfielders line up in RF also. As an aside, son played 3B in high school most of his junior year, where he neither fit the profile defensively (too much range to have fewer chances than MI) nor hitting (contact hitter). His Legion team (and showcases) he played MI and CF. Where does your son usually hit in the lineup?

In the last couple if years my son has started pitching, middle relief and closes.  Stealing, below average.  Speed good, base running skills, below average. Coach originally wanted to make him a PO but his hitting has kept him on the field so he's in the lineup.  Freshman year, hit leadoff for JV. Before that he was 3, 4 or 5 spot most of the time.  He can play MI, but he isnt nearly as smooth as the current varsity MI.  His travel coach told him he should take reps at 3rd but the current 3rd baseman is a beast at the plate (my son might be able to field as well, but doesnt hit the ball as hard/well).  He did attend a couple of local showcases where they took reps at right field throwing to 3rd and home, that suited him well.  

I'm going to take the advice to work on OF with him on the side.  I think he can show well enough out there, who knows, maybe he can make OF for his HS team (he's got a lot of ground to make up, plus show the coaches too), but I'm not seeing first base for him after college so it might not even by an option to showcase there.

Do you hit fungos to him? 

That he has below average baserunning skills might point to a lack of baseball instincts. Measurables are more important but if you aren't terrorising the ball baseball instincts do help getting into the lineup. When he makes bad baserunning decisions coaches probably think that will transfer to other areas of the game too so they don't trust him to play tougher positions than 1b

Work on getting stronger and bigger and improving your hitting and running but also work on those baseball instincts. 

I had that issue in my first years of playing too, hit the ball hard but was sloppy on field and bases so I didn't play so much. Tightened that up and then I played most of the time.

Not everyone can be a stud on the bases but you can for sure make sure that you don't make mental mistakes. 

3and2Fastball posted:
RoadRunner posted:
3and2Fastball posted:

A 2022 running a 6.75 will get recruited as an OF if he can hit even a little... Get that down to 6.5 and practically have your pick of schools

Not true for D1. 

There is a spot at most D1's for a 6.5 runner who can hit a little, absolutely

You have to hit a lot to play D1 baseball to begin with. Speed is the differentiator in recruiting after it is already established that they can hit. A kid who hits a little in HS/Summer circuit is not going to crack the lineup at the D1 where everybody hits a lot to begin with. They'll take the 6.9 kid who can hit  

Kids running a 6.25 to 6.4 get recruited. How high of a prospect and how much money they get is another matter. But if they show they are competent hitters the coaches drool at the speed and dream of making them a better hitter. 6.5 is very fast. But it’s not blazing. A 6.5 sixty is probably only a 4.6 forty. Not fast enough for track. 

Last edited by RJM
cabbagedad posted:

He's only a soph in HS... any idea what his height projects to be?  Do you consider him to be close to physical maturation or still growing into his body?

Best guess, this is it for height.  My family are early sprouters, he was much taller than most kids a couple years ago.  6 ft is it, he should put on 20 to 30lbs over the next couple of years, if he keeps eating and lifting as much as he is currently. He is aiming to run a 6.5 by his senior year.

Last edited by 2022 grad

My son played first, all through Middle school and freshman year of HS. They did not have another kid who could catch the errant throws. 

Assistant coaches always wanted to put him at SS. However coaches over ruled them. He is lefty by the way. Sophomore year JV coach says your not a first baseman, get out to center field. 

However he never worked on his skills at 1st. Lots of hours upon hours spent on our own or at younger sons games hitting Fungo. If we did not have a bat with us, I would throw it out into the field. He was already taking good lines. 

He never wanted to play first but that is where he went because he was a lefty who could catch a ball thrown to him. 

The key here is Practice, Practice and more Practice. As others have already pointed out. 

Only one college wanted him as an OF, all the others PO. With an opportunity to try to be a two way player in the fall. 

 

2022 grad posted:
cabbagedad posted:

He's only a soph in HS... any idea what his height projects to be?  Do you consider him to be close to physical maturation or still growing into his body?

Best guess, this is it for height.  My family are early sprouters, he was much taller than most kids a couple years ago.  6 ft is it, he should put on 20 to 30lbs over the next couple of years, if he keeps eating and lifting as much as he is currently. He is aiming to run a 6.5 by his senior year.

OK, then I think your thought process along with advice of others is solid.  Work on hitting, OF routes and base running skills as I agree that the speed is the obvious measurable that can stand out but he will need to learn how to maximize that tool specific to baseball.  CF is the slot to target based on current set.  Try to find a travel option that will allow him to get some innings there if possible.  I wouldn't push the move on the HS coaches but if he sees that there is a decent candidate in the program that slots well at 1B, it may make sense for him to offer up that he thinks he can contribute in CF if that is what is best for the team.

Mid 70's fastball, no matter how effective the off-speed offerings, won't garner college attention.  Sure, he can and likely will improve on that and he should make efforts to maximize his throwing skill set as well.  He will need to make some gains there for OF play but not as much as he would need for P attention.  

You seem to have a realistic assessment and expectations.  Based on current info, sounds like his pond will be  D3/NAIA schools (maybe low D2) assuming he makes the serious effort to continue improving his skill set and has the drive.  This gives him some time to do so.

Last edited by cabbagedad
Tim Turner posted:

My son who is a 2021 consistently runs a 6.62.  He’d like to be around 6.58 by the time next summer rolls around.  In that time period is that a possibility and what does he need to do to get there?  Thanks

Tim:

What position does your son play? As a junior it's very possible to improve the time. My son's "calling card" has been his speed. Once you get to a certain level (say 6.5) and speed is important to the recruiters, the more attempts you try to beat it one will. There are so many conditions (laser, handtimed, weather, field conditions, grass , turf etc.)  A track coach can help with technique.Most showcases used to run 2 players at a time. Son usually talked with "the line" to find who the fastest runner was. He would rarely lose, so a faster runner pushed him resulting in a "good running time."  Another suggestion is to have a "third party" time your son's HTF time. Scouts look at that now, like EV for power hitters- something extra to add to a profile.

Ripken Fan posted:
Tim Turner posted:

My son who is a 2021 consistently runs a 6.62.  He’d like to be around 6.58 by the time next summer rolls around.  In that time period is that a possibility and what does he need to do to get there?  Thanks

Tim:

What position does your son play? As a junior it's very possible to improve the time. My son's "calling card" has been his speed. Once you get to a certain level (say 6.5) and speed is important to the recruiters, the more attempts you try to beat it one will. There are so many conditions (laser, handtimed, weather, field conditions, grass , turf etc.)  A track coach can help with technique.Most showcases used to run 2 players at a time. Son usually talked with "the line" to find who the fastest runner was. He would rarely lose, so a faster runner pushed him resulting in a "good running time."  Another suggestion is to have a "third party" time your son's HTF time. Scouts look at that now, like EV for power hitters- something extra to add to a profile.

He is a centerfielder...I know home to first time is pretty important these days but strangely enough he has never been timed in any of the showcases/camps he has attended.

Tim Turner posted:
Ripken Fan posted:
Tim Turner posted:

My son who is a 2021 consistently runs a 6.62.  He’d like to be around 6.58 by the time next summer rolls around.  In that time period is that a possibility and what does he need to do to get there?  Thanks

Tim:

What position does your son play? As a junior it's very possible to improve the time. My son's "calling card" has been his speed. Once you get to a certain level (say 6.5) and speed is important to the recruiters, the more attempts you try to beat it one will. There are so many conditions (laser, handtimed, weather, field conditions, grass , turf etc.)  A track coach can help with technique.Most showcases used to run 2 players at a time. Son usually talked with "the line" to find who the fastest runner was. He would rarely lose, so a faster runner pushed him resulting in a "good running time."  Another suggestion is to have a "third party" time your son's HTF time. Scouts look at that now, like EV for power hitters- something extra to add to a profile.

He is a centerfielder...I know home to first time is pretty important these days but strangely enough he has never been timed in any of the showcases/camps he has attended.

If he’s played in front of any schools, coaches most likely have it. Look for a guy with a stopwatch hanging around the 1b side, lol

cabbagedad posted:
2022 grad posted:
cabbagedad posted:

He's only a soph in HS... any idea what his height projects to be?  Do you consider him to be close to physical maturation or still growing into his body?

Best guess, this is it for height.  My family are early sprouters, he was much taller than most kids a couple years ago.  6 ft is it, he should put on 20 to 30lbs over the next couple of years, if he keeps eating and lifting as much as he is currently. He is aiming to run a 6.5 by his senior year.

OK, then I think your thought process along with advice of others is solid.  Work on hitting, OF routes and base running skills as I agree that the speed is the obvious measurable that can stand out but he will need to learn how to maximize that tool specific to baseball.  CF is the slot to target based on current set.  Try to find a travel option that will allow him to get some innings there if possible.  I wouldn't push the move on the HS coaches but if he sees that there is a decent candidate in the program that slots well at 1B, it may make sense for him to offer up that he thinks he can contribute in CF if that is what is best for the team.

Mid 70's fastball, no matter how effective the off-speed offerings, won't garner college attention.  Sure, he can and likely will improve on that and he should make efforts to maximize his throwing skill set as well.  He will need to make some gains there for OF play but not as much as he would need for P attention.  

You seem to have a realistic assessment and expectations.  Based on current info, sounds like his pond will be  D3/NAIA schools (maybe low D2) assuming he makes the serious effort to continue improving his skill set and has the drive.  This gives him some time to do so.

Thx for the well thought out response.  He just returned from the Arizona Junior Fall Classic, went 5 for 8, 3 singles, a double, a triple, one stolen base, pitched 5 innings giving up 1 run, 4-5 SO.  Got to play CF and threw out 1 runner at home.  He was clocked at 80 throw from outfield.  This leads me to another question, what tools are the most important vs least important? With what little experience we have thus far, hitting for average is not a big one, hitting for power and throwing speed seem to be weighted heavy.  What do others think?

2022 grad posted:
...what tools are the most important vs least important? With what little experience we have thus far, hitting for average is not a big one, hitting for power and throwing speed seem to be weighted heavy.  What do others think?

Actually, for a speed guy, the ability to get on base (assuming he learns how to master the use of his speed) will be the most important.  His focus for this particular tool will just be to become a good hitter against college level pitching with a good eye, good pitch selection and the ability to get the barrel on the ball.   This will result in putting the ball firmly in play regularly and limiting K's.  Walks will, in turn, take care of themselves and his speed will help maximize turning those balls in play into hits.  Power is less important here because he can turn singles into doubles by stealing second and otherwise disrupting opposing pitchers.  A speed guy with true gap power is double bonus. 

The focus SHOULD NOT at all be to work for walks as part of an OBP strategy.  This will backfire more often than not against decent college pitching.  It doesn't take long for scouting reports to catch up to that and the hitter will find himself behind in counts and struggling sooner than later.  

He will need to be effective at preventing extra bases taken defensively, so the routes, glove and arm need to be decent - sounds like he is well on his way there.

Some (not most) college coaches will persuade a speed guy to hit the ball on the ground.  This is something to investigate when the time comes as this is just a minor adjustment for some hitters but can be a very difficult one for others.

Last edited by cabbagedad
2022 grad posted:
cabbagedad posted:
2022 grad posted:
cabbagedad posted:

He's only a soph in HS... any idea what his height projects to be?  Do you consider him to be close to physical maturation or still growing into his body?

Best guess, this is it for height.  My family are early sprouters, he was much taller than most kids a couple years ago.  6 ft is it, he should put on 20 to 30lbs over the next couple of years, if he keeps eating and lifting as much as he is currently. He is aiming to run a 6.5 by his senior year.

OK, then I think your thought process along with advice of others is solid.  Work on hitting, OF routes and base running skills as I agree that the speed is the obvious measurable that can stand out but he will need to learn how to maximize that tool specific to baseball.  CF is the slot to target based on current set.  Try to find a travel option that will allow him to get some innings there if possible.  I wouldn't push the move on the HS coaches but if he sees that there is a decent candidate in the program that slots well at 1B, it may make sense for him to offer up that he thinks he can contribute in CF if that is what is best for the team.

Mid 70's fastball, no matter how effective the off-speed offerings, won't garner college attention.  Sure, he can and likely will improve on that and he should make efforts to maximize his throwing skill set as well.  He will need to make some gains there for OF play but not as much as he would need for P attention.  

You seem to have a realistic assessment and expectations.  Based on current info, sounds like his pond will be  D3/NAIA schools (maybe low D2) assuming he makes the serious effort to continue improving his skill set and has the drive.  This gives him some time to do so.

Thx for the well thought out response.  He just returned from the Arizona Junior Fall Classic, went 5 for 8, 3 singles, a double, a triple, one stolen base, pitched 5 innings giving up 1 run, 4-5 SO.  Got to play CF and threw out 1 runner at home.  He was clocked at 80 throw from outfield.  This leads me to another question, what tools are the most important vs least important? With what little experience we have thus far, hitting for average is not a big one, hitting for power and throwing speed seem to be weighted heavy.  What do others think?

Hitting for average is by far the most important tool, then second  power and then speed, arm and fielding skill.

However for scouts the hit tool is less his HS stats but more whether he can make consistent good contact and hit line drives and hard grounders (liners preferred) through the infield.

The hit tool also isn't independent of power, hitting firm liners well over the infield is better than barely blooping it over the infielders heads, you can't totally devide power and hitting.

I think hitting for average is important, but it just doesnt seem the carry weight in recruiting.   Someone could say they hit .490 in HS, but as we all know,  pitching faced varies throughout the country.   He can hit .545 at the USA 15u Championships and go 5 for 8 as a Sophmore at the AZ Fall Classic and not get any buzz.  It just doesnt seem to draw attention like a bomb or throwing 90.  In fact, how does a recruiter judge hit for average when all they see are a few at bats and are told u cant trust HA stats?

It is not about your batting Average but how scouts project your hit tool. Of course there is a relationship and it is unlikely that a guy with a good hit tool bats .225 but just because you hit 300 in HS it doesn't mean you have a good hit tool against college pitching because you can't project hits against a 76 mph HS pitcher to become hits against an 89 mph college pitcher

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×