Son is 14 and an 8th grader in the Houston area. Played in an org. All paid coaches and no dad's. And don't go up to the dugout or you will be shamed. There are about 14 coaches across the age groups, all with college/low minors play and some high school/college coaching experience. BBCOR bats required starting past fall. Son played "2020" age group-you must play grade and not age. Tryouts were Jan, practice Feb, started tournament play in mid March. It's $300 a month. Includes tournaments/averaged two per month. Played until June. Off July/Aug. Played again Sep/Oct/Nov. And it's a "football/basketball friendly" org. Also, a lot of practice is conditioning/agility/some weights. Fall practices would have half the kids as spring. Tournaments were almost all within an hour or so from the house. Played BCS 13U in Fort Myers to end season. Lost in semi-finals to eventual winners. Probably over-achieved for that finish. Especially for kids that were all 2020 kids. Team got ranked by PG in their year end rankings.
Son also played with his middle school team, which was a bit like rec ball. Only about 10 games over 8 weeks.
Son was a pitcher/1B/RF for org team. He threw 76 1/3 innings for year. I write them down by date, innings and pitches. I have for last three years. Pretty good spacing/org respects the arms and listens to me on how much he can pitch. His top pitches by appearance 81, 76, 69, 66, 65, 60. Any pitcher in org is auto-pulled if they reach 30 pitches in an inning. Pitched 11 innings in fall/ 65 1/3 in spring. He played first or came out of game after pitching. Would play outfield at other times. He was fastball/changeup only until last couple games where he threw about 10 sliders - a new pitch for him. He touched 75 at the PG event. Maybe a couple more in the fall (maybe not-eyeball only). Hit 5th mostly, sometimes 4th, sometimes lower. In the fall, he got some "exposure" to playing 15,16 and even 17U local HS tournaments. Eye opening, but good. He competed.
He has an ex-MLB pitching coach outside the org. Known and respected in the area. For what it's worth, has a WS ring. Teaches son simple/break early/short stride/get on top/explode/locate/compete with your fastball. Just started showing him a slider at end of year. Son has never thrown a curve or any kind of breaking ball before that. Takes a lesson most weeks of the year when in season. $40 lesson if bought in packages. Org doesn't have bull pens at practices/but sometimes scrimmages / live batting practice. Lesson is a lesson and a bull pen.
Son plays basketball and football in the middle school the last two years. He is in a good sized private school but will go to high school in a 6A zoned public school. OK baseball, lost a long time top coach to a rival school just recently. He says he will play only baseball for the high school. I would approve of basketball if he changes his mind, but not football. Enough of the injury risk. Not sure if basketball and baseball coaches work together with kids or not at his new school.
Right now my son is going to a personal trainer during the school break (no basketball) for about 3 sessions to "learn how to work out", specifically, to learn how to squat/deadlift and lunge properly. He pulls (often at my urging) Crossover Symmetry. Also occasionally goes to the gym with me, core workout, body weight stuff, and throw medicine balls. He hasn't picked up a baseball since Nov 15. Around Jan 15, we will start to play catch, around Feb 15 throw bull pens, first pitch in March. And play catch will grow into Jaeger style long toss. He has done that for several years. He won't play for Middle School this year. He will play for a "Mickey Mantle" team in the summer. It is incoming freshman to his high school. I saw it last year, and it is like back to rec ball. He may/maynot play in the fall for his org, but he won't pitch. He will most likely spend next fall conditioning and working out. Things could change that far out.
We also hunt and fish. Especially hunt. He goes to friends houses, goes to movies. Leaves dirty socks on floor, somehow can play xbox, watch his ipad and text at the same time. He can go into a grocery store with $5 and come out with a bachelor nutritious meal. We are working college adult survival skills.
Love to hear what others have done/plan to do. Or any critique is welcome.