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Preamble: This is a link where Trevor Bauer gives some quick thoughts about summer ball for pitchers and hitters. I don't think Bauer ever plays in the MLB again, I don't know if he's done something prosecutable or if his bad choices and character make him a brand pariah but I do know he's highly technical and good actionable data can come from less than nice people.

My son sent me this link because it supports his choices not to play summer ball and work on getting better. He knows I wish he'd not turned down the Cape in 2015, (who does that?) but he's accomplished / accomplishing his goal his own way. I could argue life experiences are as valuable, but really it's what's best for the specific individual.

Trevor Bauer Summer Ball, Yes Or No?

Last edited by JucoDad
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Interesting.  He’s making good points.

Turning down the Cape though?  Does he have advisors telling him that he’ll likely get drafted anyways without playing in the Cape?

Not all Summer Leagues are equal, that is for sure.  A league with terrible or inconsistent fields and terrible or inconsistent umps can be a waste of time to a large degree, despite the value of game reps.

Not all Summer Leagues are equal, that is for sure.  A league with terrible or inconsistent fields and terrible or inconsistent umps can be a waste of time to a large degree, despite the value of game reps.

Especially for pitchers. Having this issue this year. League didn't start until mid June. None of the fields have lights, and are all grass fields. So when there are rain outs and they are made up they are two 7 inning games. So 4 fewer innings you need pitchers for. Now games are starting to be called in fewer than 9 innings because of darkness.

Interesting.  He’s making good points.

Turning down the Cape though?  Does he have advisors telling him that he’ll likely get drafted anyways without playing in the Cape?

Not all Summer Leagues are equal, that is for sure.  A league with terrible or inconsistent fields and terrible or inconsistent umps can be a waste of time to a large degree, despite the value of game reps.

The cape offer was long ago, and there were no advisors until his velo ticked up in his second year of juco. He's always been very focused on educating himself and focusing on what works best for him. I've said this many times here, I'm very glad he owns all his choices (they wouldn't all have been my choices) - I've enjoyed helping enable his journey.

@JucoDad posted:

The cape offer was long ago, and there were no advisors until his velo ticked up in his second year of juco. He's always been very focused on educating himself and focusing on what works best for him. I've said this many times here, I'm very glad he owns all his choices (they wouldn't all have been my choices) - I've enjoyed helping enable his journey.

That’s awesome, I can appreciate that.

I can share my son's thoughts on why he didn't play summer baseball.  His coaches were fine with it, and they knew when he was recruited where his priorities were.  Nobody was surprised.

1) Money.   He selected a private school.   The bank of Mom & Dad agreed to assist with 50% finances.  He was responsible for the difference plus living expenses.   He needed the money which leads us to 2) below.

2) Internship.  He had a summer engineering internship ($$) that eventually led to an engineering job offer as a rising senior.  The internships were invaluable to what he wanted to do professionally.

3) Innings.  He felt he pitched enough innings during the regular season, and more innings on the mound were just going to wear him down.

My son loved college baseball, but he had no aspirations of playing baseball beyond college.   We looked at college summer baseball as an internship but it just wasn't providing the experiences that he wanted to continue his engineering path.  If anybody wants to be a professional baseball player, then playing summer college baseball is almost a got to have if healthy.

JMO.

My son is playing a local league while working 6 days a week that includes a job and a paid internship. The league has a Saturday game (me made them) and weekday morning games (used to be at night last year) that is causing him to miss games. He barely trains outside of lifts and conditions where he does find the time. He wants to do another internship next year so he will train instead of playing a league.

fenway and 2022:

It is good that your son's can plan their future career with baseball. Summer baseball is achieving the "edge" for the next 12 months.

Question: what can I do to improve? What did I learn in today's game? How did I adjust?

Later, I applied many of the baseball lessons to the business World. Summer baseball was my classroom.

Bob

Summer ball is on its last legs and will be dead soon.  Even the Cape is a shell of what it once was.  Summer ball is for guys who didn't get any reps, are coming off injury or guys who just love the game and want to play as much as possible before the clock runs out.  The top pro prospects and starters from the top teams are not playing, or they are playing a very abbreviated schedule. The good pitchers are staying home and If you aren't facing quality pitching, what is the point?  Turn on a Northwoods game and watch how many sub 90 arms are throwing.  Odds are you will see a few sub 85 arms as well.  As word spreads on how bad the leagues were this year, I am not sure how many of these leagues will survive.         

@d-mac posted:

Summer ball is on its last legs and will be dead soon.  Even the Cape is a shell of what it once was.  Summer ball is for guys who didn't get any reps, are coming off injury or guys who just love the game and want to play as much as possible before the clock runs out.  The top pro prospects and starters from the top teams are not playing, or they are playing a very abbreviated schedule. The good pitchers are staying home and If you aren't facing quality pitching, what is the point?  Turn on a Northwoods game and watch how many sub 90 arms are throwing.  Odds are you will see a few sub 85 arms as well.  As word spreads on how bad the leagues were this year, I am not sure how many of these leagues will survive.         

I have no idea if they'll disappear, but definitely saw lots of posts about the Cape and coaches (see if you can find the interview with the Chatham Anglers coach on twitter) talking about kids coming up for just a few games here and there just to showcase. Beyond the normal temp contract situations. My son's college teammate (grad student) trained after the season was over and then in beginning of July made about 3 appearances in the Cape and went into the transfer portal at the deadline.

I can't see leagues like the Hampton's league surviving. $800 to play ~30 games. Other son was out west and his entire coaching staff quit while they were in Canada leaving an intern to manage.

Not great experiences in either the WCL or Hamptons league. Don't want to air out anything else specifically, but if someone has questions feel free to DM.

I think MLB moving the draft from early June to second week of July didn't do the summer leagues any favors. As mentioned above, a bunch of the higher profile players are opting not to play in anticipation of being drafted. Back when it was early June, if the player didn't get drafted or wasn't happy with the round they went in, they could then go play in the Cape, Northwoods, Coastal Plain, etc.

@d-mac posted:

Summer ball is on its last legs and will be dead soon.  Even the Cape is a shell of what it once was.  Summer ball is for guys who didn't get any reps, are coming off injury or guys who just love the game and want to play as much as possible before the clock runs out.  The top pro prospects and starters from the top teams are not playing, or they are playing a very abbreviated schedule. The good pitchers are staying home and If you aren't facing quality pitching, what is the point?  Turn on a Northwoods game and watch how many sub 90 arms are throwing.  Odds are you will see a few sub 85 arms as well.  As word spreads on how bad the leagues were this year, I am not sure how many of these leagues will survive.         

Summer leagues aren't going anywhere. The whole point of summer league is to provide reps for players. Reps mean many things for many players. Some players didn't get any innings on their college team during the season; they need to play so they'll be more ready to compete the following fall. Some players need to work their way back from injury; they need reps to get make sure they're healed and can play. Some players want to prove they can compete against players in a different NCAA tier so they can transfer; they need reps to prove they can. Some players want to be seen in front of professional scouts; they need reps in a league where professional scouts are present. And those are just some of the reasons that there will always be plenty of players willing to play.

On the flip side there are many teams and communities who don't have easy access to what they consider quality baseball. Or perhaps they just enjoy baseball and want to spend their summer evening watching the sport they love. They are even willing to pay money to watch!

As long as there are players willing to play, communities who want to watch and local businesses who want to turn a small profit or want to provide an outlet for their community, summer ball will continue to exist.

As far as those players who throw sub-85? Guess what?, They play college baseball somewhere at some level.

Heck, we may as well get rid of minor league baseball since the vast majority of those players will never make it to the Show!

Things have changed dramatically since 2020, the transfer portal, less rounds in the draft, later draft date, very prominent and successful training facilities pushing development over training during the summer. The whole concept of summer ball needs to evolve. Maybe start later, give players a break before starting? Maybe it's good for the communities and businesses to have a 70+ game season in the Northwoods league, but do the players need it?

@Consultant I think a portal league would be awesome.

Last edited by nycdad

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