rogers park bryan wrote:
denisdman wrote:
The difference is, both the kids and parents are committed. You practice indoors during the winter. In house has like two practices, and then they roll the balls out.
denisdman wrote:
We typically see two kids stop playing every year out of 12. You can tell when the kids' hearts are not into it. We lost several off of our 12U team because they just wanted to play football (baseball's too boring).
There is a funnel with baseball. I am just guessing, but I think about 5% of boys are truly baseball players where they love playing. By about 11, very few kids want to play baseball. By high school it is an extremely low amount.
So are they committed or not?
FWIW the travel team my daughter was asked to try out for (shes decent but I think they just need coaches and tgsts why we were asked) gets all their girls to play in college. 90% play at community college or a local school like St Xavier but they do play.
Oh and my in house team had probably 20 practices indoor and out before our first game and we had 3-4 softball days per week during season. Not all in house is dead. But I agree in house is definitely getting killed (becoming a feeder system) by travel teams
If I recall your daughter is still pretty young. The funnel will catch you too, and there will only be club/travel programs left. In baseball, in house dies past 12 after the major division. My daughter never played travel, only in house, but our league was down to one team by middle school. So we had to play other area teams, which ends up being de facto travel ball.
The people that join travel teams are committed to the season. You probably have strong interest from 10-11 out of 12-13 kids. The uninterested parties drop off each year.