| one of the local rec softball leagues only has one board member. This league is definitely not conducting background checks on coaches either. People still ignorantly allow their girls to play in this league not recognizing the severity of this oversight |
| Softball rec leagues should consider getting a little league charter |
Which league? All the leagues I know of have the background checks. (Not that background checks make that much difference, seems like every week I read about a teacher getting arrested after having a history of prior offenses.) |
Which softball rec leagues comprise an entire county? Some have larger footprints than other but the whole point of rec league is that they kids are playing in their own neighborhood. Little League programs focus on baseball, which is fine, but the girls never get a fair deal. |
Arlington Girls Softball Association for one. |
Not always. We have little league baseball and softball, but they’re run by different programs and boards. There were two little league baseball leagues in town, but they’ve now merged so there’s 1 ll baseball and 1 ll softball. They both run programs from T-ball to Juniors. Each have issues, but none that this PP describes. It’s more lack of field space and sketchy politics in all-star picks (which seems to be the norm everywhere). For registration the residency requirement is pretty lax on the softball side until you hit all-stars. Then they require all the paperwork and have it checked. |
That's a big country sponsored organization in a fairly small county, not the norm. |
Sorry, to clarify, I meant in the youngest ages of LL, there isn't usually a real softball program. Instead, the league will merge girls onto boys' baseball teams. My oldest only played softball, because she was about 10 when she started and at that point LL offered softball. But our youngest played 2 years of LL baseball before we made the move to a girls softball only rec league. Had we stayed with LL, she likely would have played another years of baseball. Our girls played youth softball in 3 different states (military family), with rec ball in 2. When we retired, we moved back to one of those states to continue growing the rec league in another part of town. We have so many girls come to our league letting us know LL is still placing the boys and girls together in minor baseball or that they never got a chance to play as many games as the boys did. Also, LL, with their wide age range teams aren't keeping girls playing. We involve them in umpiring and give them more attention to keep them active in sports past 11 - the age when girls, unless competitive, stop playing sports. LL cannot retain them because the serious girls move on to travel, and the others, being treated as an afterthought, become disinterested. |
This is a helpful perspective. I hope Arlington Girls Softball Association leaders are reading some of this. |
Not PP and I know exactly which league PP is talking about. There was a very unamicable split between that independent league and one of the new little leagues that is sending 3 teams to all-stars this year. NB that I don't represent or have kids who play for (or ever played for) either of these leagues. I wouldn't judge the entire Fairfax County interleague group by that league, at all. |
That post has nothing to do with AGSA, which is softball only and has multiple girls teams at all ages. Did you quote the wrong post? |
Jealousy of a league that legitimately draws players from an entire county (and beyond) is not a good look, PP. |
I'm in Charlotte and we simply don't have enough girls playing softball in any of the rec leagues in the county. There's a separate county-wide softball league for girls as a result. Many of the youth sports associations here that sponsor Little League (or Cal Ripken) will also sponsor softball through this local league. Believe me, softball parents would love it if their was enough interest to do truly rec softball and not have to travel around the county. Unfortunately, there's not, and this is how we make softball available to our girls. And it least with this model, the girls are on teams with other girls from their local community. It's not like Suzie is playing on a team 30 minutes across the county with girls she doesn't know. She plays with the girls who live near her, many of whom she probably goes to school with, or they go to another nearby school. It still supports that community feeling. I've heard similar stories from around the country. There's just not enough girls playing softball to have true rec programs like those that exist in baseball. |
By my count there are 7 softball little leagues in Fairfax County (SCLL, CSLL, SYA, GFLL, MLL, WLL, and FLL) and 7 independent leagues (BRYC, NVGSA, VGSL, CYA, FHYAA, SYC, and HRYS though they play Loudoun leagues). That doesn't include Arlington (AGSA), Alexandria (ALL), Loudoun (LSLL, LGSL, WLGSL, LLGSL, AGSL) or Prince William counties (PWGFS, PWCSLL) who might play with or against these leagues. If anything we have too many opportunities for the number of girls who might possibly play softball in northern Virginia, making each league smaller and necessitating interleauge play rather than allowing for a few bigger leagues that can build in more parity. |
Little League is making a push for AGSA to merge with them. |