Scotty83,
Your most recent point brings up one of the artificial but inescapable features of travel ball.
At its highest levels, baseball is a game of small differences manifesting themselves over the long haul as the worst teams win around 40% of their games and the best teams lose around 40% of their games.
However, at weekend or even week-long travel tournaments, baseball is a game of big differences that must manifest themselves in every game. To win a tournament, a team must sweep through pool play and survive a single elimination bracket, which might require them to have 9 or 10 quality starting pitchers.
It may be true that the starting eight position players and top three pitchers on some teams in the consolation brackets are as good as those on many teams in the championship bracket. These teams can have great experiences at tournaments, accomplish all their objectives about playing well against good competition, and maybe even get visibility for their players. The players can hold their heads high, knowing they have a good team that fell short primarily because they weren't built for big tournament play.
All that is fine. To my mind, it becomes a problem only if coaches of such teams market consolation bracket performance as more than it is.
To my view, teams that aren't in the championship bracket are like golfers who miss the cut. They don't finish with a place ranking. The best scoring golfer who misses the cut doesn't finish in 73rd place. He misses the cut.
Tournaments are not designed to rank order all the teams that enter. They are designed to identify a champion. It's fair for a coach to say his team finished second in a tough pool that produced the eventual tournament champion. It's fair for a team to include consolation games in its won-loss record. But it stretches the truth to claim any place finish that derives from anything outside the championship bracket.