Anonymous wrote:There are at least 5-6 usually
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son who had played AAU basketball for two years did not make the freshman team at our FCPS school.
Because he’s competing with players like my son who started playing on (good to great) AAU teams at age 10. And played year round by age 12.
Anonymous wrote:My son who had played AAU basketball for two years did not make the freshman team at our FCPS school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In our large public it doesn’t seem over the top hard. They also let 15 boys on the team though which is a ridiculous size for a basketball team.
Thats rough b/c only the best 5-6 will get to move up to JV even.
Anonymous wrote:In our large public it doesn’t seem over the top hard. They also let 15 boys on the team though which is a ridiculous size for a basketball team.
Anonymous wrote:That’s a tough question to answer since there are lots of levels in basketball, and everybody thinks their team is at least a b+.
My kid’s large public (state champion) high school had 90 kids show up for freshman/JV tryouts (30 spots) and 100 kids show up for varsity tryouts (15 spots).
DS played travel basketball as a starter for an AAU team that played in the top division of large tournaments (4-5 divisions usually, 30 or so teams in each) and won about 60% of their games. Coaches said he was on the bubble between JV and freshman team. He ended up on the freshman team and had a great year. HTH.
Note that he also did green days and played summer league, so coaches knew him.