There are still many, many rec teams and fewer travel and AAU teams. That was the point. |
I think you need a bit of both. There are kids that can do skills and drills but freezes up when they're under pressure. One of my kids was like this and it helped a lot by trying to find them as many playing opportunities with quality players as possible. But once you get to a certain age level, everyone can do the same thing. So you REALLY need to stand out from the rest of them to have a shot to get onto the team. The issue I've seen is that some people show up to tryouts totally unprepared and unable to do the skills and drills that they have players run through tryouts. So have seen cases where some of them leave during tryouts or not show up for the next session of it. Unless they came from a decent rec team with a coach that emphasized some of the things, just having experience with rec ball or playground ball won't help with getting onto a team by itself. In some of the tryouts I've seen, they don't really run the kids through the skills and drills at the younger ages, like elementary school. But by middle school a lot of the tryouts pretty much have kids do the same thing with maybe some slight variation in some specific drills different coaches might do. |
On the girls side, by middle school, the coaches know the players in the area including the ones who don't play for them. Even if they don't know them, they see what backpack they have and the first question is who do you play for. That alone is intimidating for rec players |
| It’ll reset after puberty. Coaches are looking for athletic kids who know how to play who have a high ceiling. Even if they’re not nearly as polished or skilled as some of the other kids who are probably close to maxed out on their potential by high school. |
Lol. No |
This. A lot of girls are told to be Uber aggressive at tryouts. Tripping, doing drills wrong so they are a ball hog (always taking the shot, showing off their form, hopefully making >50%). |
I don’t have girls, maybe trainers work differently with them. By high school, my kid was fouled hard on every rep of every drill by trainers. In some scrimmages, fouls were mandatory. In small group training, kids got in shoving matches and occasionally threw punches. My son actually stoped asking me to help him with layup drills because I wouldn’t foul him hard enough and he said it was a waste of time. |
My daughter does small group. The female trainers will be physical and so will other girls. Most of the male trainers will back off on the girls. She hates going to groups where she's matched up with boys because they will either be so physical it's ridiculous to avoid looking bad against a girl or they will not touch them at all. |
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No chance.
2 years rec? Does she train? |
| NP - how are there so many players for AAU - is it all people with $$$? |
| Spring rec is all AAU and travel girls, so if my girl can hang with them, can she play AAU? |
What? Spring is AAu season |
In 6th grade more than half of the girls are short. Many haven’t had a major growth spurt yet. |
That’s my daughter’s issue. She’s done a lot of fun stuff, drills and skills, one on one, three on three, camps. She’s in a middle school rec team and she’s not used to playing full games. She is the one who is half a foot taller and 30 lbs heavier than most of the girls but my daughter doesn’t know what to do when the girl is in her face and pushing. She’s not aggressive enough with these tiny girls who are squirming all around her. |