Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's true teams are put together in august, but sometimes teams pick up additional players before spring, like now. Most teams break in Nov and Dec, start working out for spring. Try play softball.net on which coaches post openings. Good luck.
This website appears to be for Richmond teams. Is there a similar one for NoVa? THanks.
Anonymous wrote:It's true teams are put together in august, but sometimes teams pick up additional players before spring, like now. Most teams break in Nov and Dec, start working out for spring. Try play softball.net on which coaches post openings. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks! -OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD 9 is playing 10U softball. She played 2 seasons in a different league in 8U. The first season was excellent, with good instruction. Second season, not so much--didn't learn anything, didn't improve. This fall we tried a new league. While we think the league overall is more organized and more robust, the coach is completely inexperienced although a really nice guy/dad. For example, he does not come with a plan for practice. We have also tried going to the free pitching clinics by the league but that also seems to be limited in actual instruction and consists of just hurling the ball into the fence 200 times, not at the actual pitching distance. My daughter has improved with her fielding and pitching purely by us going in the backyard and working at home, not at practice. Which leads me to my actual question: does doing "travel" usually get you better, more experienced instruction? I don't have a clue what a 10U travel softball skill level looks like and if my daughter would fit in with that. I suspect she is slightly below that, but I almost feel like it will be hard to improve much staying in rec ball, and it seems that it is a conundrum. Am I missing something here?
The short answer is yes, you'll get better instruction at the travel level. But even there if you really want to improve at a specific skill like pitching, you need to supplement with private lessons. This isn't like soccer, which isn't as skill-oriented as softball. Most girls who do well in competitive softball get private lessons for hitting or pitching (if they want to be a pitcher).
That said, most softball in this area is "daddy ball" as well -- it's not like soccer where there are paid professional coaches. The key difference is the dads (and it's usually dads, although there are some mom-run teams) generally know how to coach the sport, having gotten training.
At the 10U level there aren't that many teams. But if you tell me where you are located -- NOVA or MD -- I'll tell you which programs are strongest/most active.
There are more teams at the 12U level
Softball is played at A, B, and C levels, although as a practical matter there are very few A teams. Mostly B teams. 10UC kind of sucks because they have modified rules (no stealing home allowed, drop dropped third strike rule or infield fly, and 5 run limits per inning). B teams play three games on Tournament Saturdays, while C teams play 2.
We are in Fairfax. The leagues I am aware of are VGSL, CYA, SYA, and BRYC.
Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD 9 is playing 10U softball. She played 2 seasons in a different league in 8U. The first season was excellent, with good instruction. Second season, not so much--didn't learn anything, didn't improve. This fall we tried a new league. While we think the league overall is more organized and more robust, the coach is completely inexperienced although a really nice guy/dad. For example, he does not come with a plan for practice. We have also tried going to the free pitching clinics by the league but that also seems to be limited in actual instruction and consists of just hurling the ball into the fence 200 times, not at the actual pitching distance. My daughter has improved with her fielding and pitching purely by us going in the backyard and working at home, not at practice. Which leads me to my actual question: does doing "travel" usually get you better, more experienced instruction? I don't have a clue what a 10U travel softball skill level looks like and if my daughter would fit in with that. I suspect she is slightly below that, but I almost feel like it will be hard to improve much staying in rec ball, and it seems that it is a conundrum. Am I missing something here?
The short answer is yes, you'll get better instruction at the travel level. But even there if you really want to improve at a specific skill like pitching, you need to supplement with private lessons. This isn't like soccer, which isn't as skill-oriented as softball. Most girls who do well in competitive softball get private lessons for hitting or pitching (if they want to be a pitcher).
That said, most softball in this area is "daddy ball" as well -- it's not like soccer where there are paid professional coaches. The key difference is the dads (and it's usually dads, although there are some mom-run teams) generally know how to coach the sport, having gotten training.
At the 10U level there aren't that many teams. But if you tell me where you are located -- NOVA or MD -- I'll tell you which programs are strongest/most active.
There are more teams at the 12U level
Softball is played at A, B, and C levels, although as a practical matter there are very few A teams. Mostly B teams. 10UC kind of sucks because they have modified rules (no stealing home allowed, drop dropped third strike rule or infield fly, and 5 run limits per inning). B teams play three games on Tournament Saturdays, while C teams play 2.
Anonymous wrote:DD 9 is playing 10U softball. She played 2 seasons in a different league in 8U. The first season was excellent, with good instruction. Second season, not so much--didn't learn anything, didn't improve. This fall we tried a new league. While we think the league overall is more organized and more robust, the coach is completely inexperienced although a really nice guy/dad. For example, he does not come with a plan for practice. We have also tried going to the free pitching clinics by the league but that also seems to be limited in actual instruction and consists of just hurling the ball into the fence 200 times, not at the actual pitching distance. My daughter has improved with her fielding and pitching purely by us going in the backyard and working at home, not at practice. Which leads me to my actual question: does doing "travel" usually get you better, more experienced instruction? I don't have a clue what a 10U travel softball skill level looks like and if my daughter would fit in with that. I suspect she is slightly below that, but I almost feel like it will be hard to improve much staying in rec ball, and it seems that it is a conundrum. Am I missing something here?