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My son (2025) is trying to decide on which summer team to choose.  He has narrowed it to 3 teams in which he was offered a roster spot. There would be a clear choice if it was not for the drive (∼50 minute).  So, the question is, is being on the best team worth the extra drive time?



Choices:

1) 25 minute drive from house, coached by current/retired HS coaches, top of the roster looks good but then appears to be a drop off, practice 2 times per week

2) 40 minute drive from house, team is run by a local university, coached by the university's grad assistants/volunteer coaches, and former players.  Again the top of the roster looks good but then appears to be a sharp drop off, practice 1 time per week

3) 50 minute drive from house, coached by current/retired HS coaches, top to bottom of the roster is very good.

My son is leaning towards #3 because he wants to be on a team where they all push each other to be better and on a team that will play some "meaningful" games in tournaments so he can face better opponents.  So looking for some advice on if playing on a more competitive team will be worth the extra hour drive twice a week for the summer. 

Thanks in advance.

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There is a big difference between playing two games and getting eliminated and going deep into brackets.  The quality of the reps go way up.  But will he actually play on the better team?

My son played on a top travel team that was about an hour away.  They had great practices and did an excellent job developing the kids.  Well worth the drive.

There is another major travel team that has a great name but zero development.  I would never have taken him there.

At 14/15, you need to get bigger, stronger, faster and much better at baseball.  I would go with the best team he can actually play on that will make him better.

Typically, the advice is to play on the best team where your son will get significant playing time and develop skills and experience.   Without knowing what your son's goals and aspirations are as well as each of the summer teams in question, it is difficult to say which is best for everybody.   Travel teams can vary quite a bit in their approach and schedules.   Also, travel baseball is not inexpensive hit to the family budget so that may be an overriding factor vs driving time.   In our family (3 boys) driving time was never a consideration.   It was always about fit with the appropriate summer travel team.

Good luck!

The answer depends on which of the options will help your son develop the most. My knee jerk answer would be #3 but that would be a counterproductive choice if he couldn’t get on the field enough. Another issue to consider is the amount if practice time. Kids get better by practicing - not by playing more games. IMO this is the achilles heel of most travel ball orgs. Total emphasis on games does not develop players. I would go with the option that gives him a combination of the best coaching and the most practice time.

How much travelling will the different teams actually be doing, how far away - i.e. how expensive?  Can you get a sense of whether they will be playing the same tournaments, or different ones?  If he wants to be challenged, but will be playing in the lowest level tournaments, that will not be as good as if his team is in tournaments playing against better teams.  Then you have to figure out whether the cost of travelling is worth the challenge and development differences.

I agree about the driving - I have great memories of that.

As stated above, your son's goals are an important part of the puzzle. Last summer as a rising junior my son played on a very good team. They played 3 of the biggest events of the summer and a total of 8 tournaments. The schools he's interested in were only at one of his tournaments the entire summer. If I could do it over again I wish he would have been on a team that would have given him the ability to be in the gym more and less tournaments.

However, there were 5 kids on the team who were able to commit to P5 schools. IMO, at 14/15 the focus should be about getting some good reps against the best competition, lots of practice, and focusing on getting bigger and faster.

That drive is an extra hour per week of alone time with your son. You might not think of that time as precious right now, but I bet you will in a few years. If it were me I'd tell him that it's 100% his decision, and that I could not possibly care less about the drive.

THIS!!!!  My son played an hour away when he started as a 9 year old.  Only one practice a week during the winter (on Sunday), but it was great.  His mom and I would actually fight over who got to take him because we both just enjoyed the quiet 2 hours on the road with him. 

What are your son's goals for playing after HS?   As a 2025 he needs to be playing for a team that is well coached and can develop him as a player and person....but also that either 1) will play tourneys where he can be seen or 2) a team that has good connections to colleges...and at least plays in competitive tourneys.  It seems early for a 2025 but at this point, it's never too early to start being seen....especially if his skill level is above average compared to other kids his age.   Playing travel ball tourneys in some small town with one local D3 coach watching won't help him get to the next level....unless of course he wants to play for the local D3 school

How much travelling will the different teams actually be doing, how far away - i.e. how expensive?  Can you get a sense of whether they will be playing the same tournaments, or different ones?  If he wants to be challenged, but will be playing in the lowest level tournaments, that will not be as good as if his team is in tournaments playing against better teams.  Then you have to figure out whether the cost of travelling is worth the challenge and development differences.

I agree about the driving - I have great memories of that.

They will be playing in similar tournaments (Perfect Game, Five Tool), one will play in the USA Baseball Teams Championship, the other plans to go to the Future Stars National Tournament.  The one affiliated with the university is not allowed to travel out of state per NCAA rules.  The dues are very similar, so the one time travel is the primary cost differentiator. 

His current focus is becoming a better baseball player and continuing to get bigger/faster/stronger (5'10/170).  He is not looking to "showcase" nor expects to be recruited at this point.  I think all the teams have quality coaching, however the one team will only practice once a week, which he does not like.  The furthest team will practice 2-3 times per week. 

I agree on the car rides.  Those are special times.  Since he will have his learner's permit by then, he will likely be sharing in the driving, no matter where he ends up. 

Thanks for the replies.

Some key things with travel programs I found to have the greatest impact on my son when he was that age.

1. A good coach means all the difference.  This coach played D1 and coached at D1 prior to doing the travel ball thing.  He ran practice like a D1 program and set true expectations.  Playing for this coach who told him he was player 13 on a 13 man team (was added late), then played him exactly the amount of time (1/2 of the games in field 1/2 at EH) in the beginning until he proved himself, and then followed through with additional time come playoffs, was key to his confidence.

2. Playing Up, not because they played top competition, but because he played with kids who pushed him.  Once he found he could hang, and they accepted him as just another player, the development skyrocketed.  I truly believe for baseball, unless you are a PO, that it is far more important to play with better players on your own team, than it is to play better competition, even if that means less playing time (just not zero playing time).  You interact and learn far more from your own team as you work with them, 100 times more than the comparatively few plays you make against competition.

3. After winter practice when they could get out on fields.  The practice was just with his team,  Not 3 or 4 teams of same age combined practice.  I hate that.  this allowed the coach to run the practice and run situation over and over till they got it right, vs everyone running it once to get through the 4 guys behind the plate and 3 at short who needed to get at least 1 rep, etc.  The team learned to play defense as a team and learned how to be disciplined as a team, and praised as a team.

I can only tell you what I know meant the most to my son's development at a crucial time.

Two points:  Where does he fall on each roster?  At the top of all three, in the middle of all three, or on the bottom of #3?

Since it is his choice to go to #3 make him agree to no screen time on one of the two directions each practice.  As you have heard here, all of us who have come out the other side know how important that time was for us.  Luckily for most of mine, sons didn't have the screens to look at, as much.

HS travel ball is a great topic, and doesn't get discussed much here.  There are different ways to run a HS-age travel ball team, and it's important to set your expectations before you sign on.

- coach can have the policy that everyone plays equally, either in the name of development for all, or because they had tryouts so they must all be good, or because everyone is paying equally.

- coach can have the policy that some players play all the time, and everyone else rotates the other spots - this is in the name of development or recruitment for those particular players (or because it's the coach's son)

- coach can run it like a HS team, where the best 9 play, and everyone else gets spot time.  This can also be in the name of recruitment of the better players, or because he wants to win

Regardless of where your son fits in the pecking order, he's going to be affected by the team philosophy.  If he's not one of the top players, he may rarely play.  Or, if he is one of the top players, he may get frustrated at losing because of errors by other players if they rotate evenly.  Or, his arm might be over-used.  Or, (fill in the blank)...  We saw many kids drop out of travel teams for one of these reasons, and when that happens, the rest of the team is also affected.

Last edited by anotherparent

If you’re considering all these teams they’re all within acceptable driving distance. A player should want to be on a competitive team with a reputation in a competitive environment. He should want quality instruction. He should be looking at a team that will give him exposure to the next level** on the way up to his ultimate goal. He should pick the team.

** 17u coaches or other coaches from academies checked out our team looking for next level (17u) prospects. The team had a reputation for being well coached and competitive.



I agree about the driving - I have great memories of that.

THIS is spot on!

I don't know enough about the teams to offer an opinion but I drove 50 minutes each way twice a week for 3 years for a quality organization with great reps. They built players who wanted to work. I treasure those hours spent in the car talking now more then you could imagine. Plus I got to take a nap twice a week during practice!

My 2 cents:

1. Find out who runs the best practices (if possible) .That's also often a sign of the best coach (regardless of W & L's) I'd lean that way first.

2.  IF I understood you correctly options #1 & #3 both practice 2x per week.  (IF you son's only playing baseball vs. multi sport then I'd lean towards the extra practice vs option 2)

3.  I'll go against the grain with letting your son pick... Your his taxi service and we don't know if you've got other kids to haul around.  Once he's old enough to drive himself then I'm all for letting him make his own decisions.  Don't be afraid to put yourself, siblings, etc first.  IF he's truly driven to succeed this choice won't make or break him. 

4.  The best players on teams often get the most coaching attention.  Don't be afraid to pick a lower level team if the coaches are great.  Your son might find he get's more detailed coaching on that team vs. the superstar team.  However, I wouldn't want my son to be the very best player on his travel ball team because and I think it would help push him to continue to improve.

@old_school posted:

THIS is spot on!

I don't know enough about the teams to offer an opinion but I drove 50 minutes each way twice a week for 3 years for a quality organization with great reps. They built players who wanted to work. I treasure those hours spent in the car talking now more then you could imagine. Plus I got to take a nap twice a week during practice!

My son and I spend a lot of time in the car together as it is (and has been that way since he was younger and racing BMX).    One of the things I enjoy doing with him is putting together a curated playlist for the ride so that he can be exposed to a lot of different kinds of music.  We listen to blues, punk, hip-hop, classical, rock, jazz, heavy metal, country...everything.  It makes for good conversations.  We now take turns playing DJ. 

@Tigre Azul posted:

My son and I spend a lot of time in the car together as it is (and has been that way since he was younger and racing BMX).    One of the things I enjoy doing with him is putting together a curated playlist for the ride so that he can be exposed to a lot of different kinds of music.  We listen to blues, punk, hip-hop, classical, rock, jazz, heavy metal, country...everything.  It makes for good conversations.  We now take turns playing DJ.

We tried that. A little Cardi B "WAP" and "Up" ended that pretty quick.

As I've been exposed more and more to college baseball I've actually become more cynical and disappointed. From what I've learned in the past few years I would definitely not recommend the Option #2. Those guys are there to collect a paycheck and scout other players. Half the roster being good and half being bad means half are good and half are walking checks, meaning they're only there to fill out a roster.

Play with the best players and don't stop until he can't reach a higher level. I'd play up at 16u this summer. If that is not an option I'd be joining team 3. Reps are nice. Quality reps are better. After freshman year I pulled mine off the cushy team with all this friends he had been on since 10u and put him with a regional team. At 16u I put him with a national team where 5 were drafted out of high school. Nobody has ever said playing with/against the better competition was a bad idea

@Tigre Azul posted:


I agree on the car rides.  Those are special times.  Since he will have his learner's permit by then, he will likely be sharing in the driving, no matter where he ends up.

If taken advantage of properly, this will provide more valuable for his future than any of the baseball work. Ensuring that he drives as much as possible, no matter the time/weather/location, can help prepare him for a lifetime of responsible driving.

Our son logged close to 15,000 miles behind the wheel before he turned 16 as a result of his baseball activities. He had his share of near accidents in that time, and we were so grateful that we could be with him during those learning experiences.

@PABaseball posted:

As I've been exposed more and more to college baseball I've actually become more cynical and disappointed. From what I've learned in the past few years I would definitely not recommend the Option #2. Those guys are there to collect a paycheck and scout other players. Half the roster being good and half being bad means half are good and half are walking checks, meaning they're only there to fill out a roster.

Play with the best players and don't stop until he can't reach a higher level. I'd play up at 16u this summer. If that is not an option I'd be joining team 3. Reps are nice. Quality reps are better. After freshman year I pulled mine off the cushy team with all this friends he had been on since 10u and put him with a regional team. At 16u I put him with a national team where 5 were drafted out of high school. Nobody has ever said playing with/against the better competition was a bad idea

Sounds like you are in a dark place right now with college baseball.  Sorry for whatever caused it.  Got there my middle son's senior year.  But have renewed appreciation.

@PitchingFan posted:

Sounds like you are in a dark place right now with college baseball.  Sorry for whatever caused it.  Got there my middle son's senior year.  But have renewed appreciation.

I guess that would depend on who you ask. It can get dark when you step behind the curtain. It's one of those - I'm not mad, I'm disappointed type situations and I'm mostly bitter for a lot of roommates, teammates, friends, etc. Especially the ones who were living with him but not technically officially on the lease so my wallet will definitely be in a darker place. But this is not the thread for any of that.

In any event I'm still looking forward to the season, especially since it may be the only form of baseball we have for the foreseeable future. Just hoping we make the tournament this year after a late season skid last year. As always I will be rooting for your son and for UT to make another deep run.

Last edited by PABaseball

I've gotten a bit cynical myself. They say college camps are the best option. My son has gone to two D1 camps at different schools and they were about the same price. First school's camp was two days, limited participants, with coaches/players providing instruction/feedback. Second school's camp was one day, unlimited participants, with coaches taking notes (no feedback) and athletic department majors operating the equipment at stations. I have no idea how the second school's coaches could get a feel for any of the participants...it definitely felt like it was designed to bring in money more than anything. They always advertise how many of their current players had attended one of the camps, but I'm pretty sure these players were not "discovered" at a camp.

You're asking a guy who has literally done 4 hours of driving for his son to attend a 2 hour practice. (Several times.) Two hours to get there, two hours at practice, two hours to get home.  Oh, and there were many times where we left at 5 AM to make said practice.

The way I looked at it: If it was going to help, why not?

Plus, I have never been that dad who is too into his own stuff and would go golfing or be on a fishing boat all day and ignore an opportunity to do something for his kid. I would rather drive two hours, sit in a parking lot for two more hours, and then drive another two hours...if it was beneficial to my kid.

Also, I wanted to set the example for him for when the time comes when he has his own kids: Being a parent means making sacrifices and putting your dependents ahead of yourself.

@Momball11 posted:

I've gotten a bit cynical myself. They say college camps are the best option. My son has gone to two D1 camps at different schools and they were about the same price. First school's camp was two days, limited participants, with coaches/players providing instruction/feedback. Second school's camp was one day, unlimited participants, with coaches taking notes (no feedback) and athletic department majors operating the equipment at stations. I have no idea how the second school's coaches could get a feel for any of the participants...it definitely felt like it was designed to bring in money more than anything. They always advertise how many of their current players had attended one of the camps, but I'm pretty sure these players were not "discovered" at a camp.

I stopped to watch a showcase at a local D1. I stayed for a couple of hours. I knew one of the players helping out. I told him I only saw four players with D1 swings. He said those four were discovered at PG and invited up for the weekend. He said everyone else is a paying customer and likely have no shot.  

Everyone looked good in the field and had quality arms. But the swings on four players were significantly quicker and better than the rest. The ball jumped off their bats differently than the rest.

@Momball11 posted:

I've gotten a bit cynical myself. They say college camps are the best option. My son has gone to two D1 camps at different schools and they were about the same price. First school's camp was two days, limited participants, with coaches/players providing instruction/feedback. Second school's camp was one day, unlimited participants, with coaches taking notes (no feedback) and athletic department majors operating the equipment at stations. I have no idea how the second school's coaches could get a feel for any of the participants...it definitely felt like it was designed to bring in money more than anything. They always advertise how many of their current players had attended one of the camps, but I'm pretty sure these players were not "discovered" at a camp.

So, this is really worthy of a different thread.  But, who says that "college camps are the best option"?  On this site, most agree that college camps are mainly worth it for recruiting if you have been personally invited by the coach (not in a "personalized" email, but in a call to your travel coach or someone like that).  That's how they can advertise that current players attended camps.

It can be different for levels below D1 with smaller recruiting budgets, where camps can make a difference, but even they often cast a much wider net than just their camps.

So, this is really worthy of a different thread.  But, who says that "college camps are the best option"?  On this site, most agree that college camps are mainly worth it for recruiting if you have been personally invited by the coach (not in a "personalized" email, but in a call to your travel coach or someone like that).  That's how they can advertise that current players attended camps.

It can be different for levels below D1 with smaller recruiting budgets, where camps can make a difference, but even they often cast a much wider net than just their camps.

Maybe "best" wasn't a good choice of words. In terms of financial cost, camps are lower than PG and PBR showcases.

My son has decided to go with option 3 (50 minute drive) and is excited about joining the team.  I looked and my gym has a location a few minutes away, so I'll have a productive place to go during practice. 

I sincerely appreciate everyone's feedback, all of it has been enlightening.  I knew there would be a sampling bias posting this question to this board but that is exactly what I wanted, people who have been there and done that and know what it takes.  Much appreciated.

@Momball11 posted:

Maybe "best" wasn't a good choice of words. In terms of financial cost, camps are lower than PG and PBR showcases.

You can usually get an idea of how good a camp is if you put it out there for review.  Camps were great for us and my son did go to some unsolicited that worked out well.  The worst camp he ever went to (by a long shot) is the number one ranked preseason team.  Completely unorganized. Kids running everything. They did invite him via twitter message.  He told them he was coming.  They didn't talk to him at all.  Had his stats mixed up with someone else and then called the next day asking if he was at all interested in their program...they had no idea he had even been at the camp the day before.  He was so irritated by the camp that we juggled things around to go to, I don't think he would have even considered them.  After talking with some others, I heard that was a very normal occurrence for their camps.  On the other hand there are camps that are amazing and that I've never heard anyone say anything different about.  Just ask around before you invest, or have a few interactions with the coach before you go.

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