man of few opinions wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
The funny thing about all this travel crap is that it amounts to nothing. A good or athletic player is probably going to make a high school team anyway. No one is going to play any significant college baseball and less than no one will play in the pros. Money and time well spent by maladjusted parents.
this was the exact point i was making to a group of coaches over at the fields this weekend. if your kid works hard and loves playing ball, and plays with his buddies a lot in their spare time, and goes to the cages regularly and plays in the community little league, when all is said and done he is going to meet up with all the travel league kids when they are freshmen in high school, so what is the point? Sure, there are some outstandingly talented kids in the travel leagues who are looking for more challenge, but for a regular kid, i would rather play all the time in a community league than sit on the bench on a 12-13 strong travel team. sure, it is exciting making a travel team, but what is the real benefit unless your kid is a truly special talent?
if they dissolved the splinter travel teams and organized everything back into a central community league, got all the talent back under one umbrella, everyone would benefit. then you could certainly have an additional travel team at each level for tournaments for the kids and parents who want to go for that.
Fair points, but I would counter with this. Your kid will probably improve his play more on a travel team for several reasons:
-The coaching is much better than a typical in house team.
-More balls will get put in play.
-The other kids can actually make the throws/catches.
-Playing against tougher competition improves your own game.
-The kids are playing a lot more baseball and practicing more.
I didn't want to do travel, but I couldn't take another year of just doing in house. We would only get through the batting order twice in a game, and my son ended up getting 4 at bats a week. The kids around him are so bad that very few plays were made in the field, and the pitchers generally just walked him. Now he is going to play about 50 games this year, and he is getting lots of practice. Of course we love baseball, so we enjoy all the extra running around. I know it's not for everyone.