You seem confused. That's normal for a tryout for a smaller org. That doesn't mean their teams are grades 3-6 combined. |
You sound like a troll with no evidence. |
Nope, just a person with an understanding of AAU basketball. If you can't deal with combined age groups, then girls basketball is not the sport for you. |
OMG you are the problem. Maybe you should just admit you're as guilty as sin. |
| Why is it all the larger more reputable clubs just happen to know which tournaments they'll have the oldest age groups in the bracket at? |
DP. Clubs have tryouts for multiple teams. That doesn’t mean all those kids are one team. Clearly you’re not a basketball person. |
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Its all a business and if you understand how things work you can work around that way.
The top clubs will get top players over attracting them with no costs. Clubs still have costs so they need more kids who pay to cover those costs so you have "b" and "c" teams to pay for the "a" teams. Teams will have older kids playing so those teams can win and look good to attract "paying kids" I saw what should be a 9th grader this past weekend playing on a 7th grade team because they are double reclass and it's allowed. Just find a decent program (plenty around) with strong coaches who want to develop the kids and have your kid do skills work and they will be fine. |
Any parent who is holding their kid back two grades for youth basketball is insane. |
I see why they do it. They aren't really holding them back. Usually, they just started later so they can't play on age-appropriate teams. I get like one for a short time. But this appeared to be a whole team of them. |
Top clubs have sponsorship money from Nike or UnderArmor. In our experience, this sponsorship money wss plenty to play team costs plus some left over to defray B team costs. |
The number of teams that actually get sponsorship money is very small. I've talked to clubs who you would expect to have money and they weren't getting any. More likely to get gear (backpacks, jerseys, etc.) than actually get money. That percentage is very low. These teams rely on their "b" and "c " teams to support the program since most kids on the "A" team don't have to pay dues to attract them. |