Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see so many parents in our little league who are the crazy sports parents that get discussed here often. They’re overly invested in their kids’ performance, very up to date on who is getting picked for what, gossiping about the kids and the coaches. It goes on and on.
I do not under any circumstance want to be one of those people. I have one kid who is just average, but my younger kid seems to be the best on his team and people keep bringing up the possibility of him being on the summer all star teams etc. Suddenly I found myself thinking about this a lot, even though objectively I don’t really care. I don’t even like baseball that much! And we have a ton of other things we could do with our time other than sit at baseball fields all summer.
How do I stop myself from falling into the crazy sport parent world before it really starts. Just stop engaging with people? Ignore it when it comes up? Redirect myself when I start thinking about it?
All Stars is 7 days a week of practices and games and travel for the tournament. And it is legitimately fun for the kids who love the game. There is a lot of pomp and circumstance- the kids walk in the Fourth of July parade together and get awards and bling rings. People try to make it special for the kids because it is special. For the nerd parents- they research all of the rules and stats. For the crafty parents- so much swag is made! For the food parents- so much potlucking!
I mention this because I know it seems to be “crazy” to obsess over it but the kids take it so seriously too. When they go back to school- they wear the all stars hats and jerseys to class. (Our league has them customized and everything.). The whole school knows who made the team- it’s very much a thing.
But it’s also ephemeral. And every baseball parent looks back on it fondly. I know you think it’s crazy- but it’s just a magical time of raw emotion for these kids. It’s a huge level of growth too.
I hope you will reconsider it next year if you have the opportunity. Your kid, if they love the sport, might ask and I hope you give it a shot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your husband isn’t a coach and isn’t best friends with a coach or a lobbyist with the coach, your kid isn’t making the all star team. It doesn’t matter how good they are. Truly, stop thinking about it and hope that your child goes on vacation before all the kids start talking about it. The team is predetermined by the appointed coach of the team. He will pick his drinking buddies’ kids. Your child is not going to make it. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. If you don’t have a penis, and a baseball related favor to give their kid in return they’re not picking you. Tell your kid that all star is rigged and it’s not the best players and move on. Seriously. It’s not happening. Your kid can bat .800 and pitch strikeouts only and they’re not making it.
Yup.
Learned this the hard way with my oldest for 10u all stars when I was a naieve parent. My son hit a legit 750 and was the best hitter in the league by a huge margin. Also one of the best fielders and pitchers. He was left off the team for a 2nd grader who's dad is the varsity coach at the local HS.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband isn’t a coach and isn’t best friends with a coach or a lobbyist with the coach, your kid isn’t making the all star team. It doesn’t matter how good they are. Truly, stop thinking about it and hope that your child goes on vacation before all the kids start talking about it. The team is predetermined by the appointed coach of the team. He will pick his drinking buddies’ kids. Your child is not going to make it. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. If you don’t have a penis, and a baseball related favor to give their kid in return they’re not picking you. Tell your kid that all star is rigged and it’s not the best players and move on. Seriously. It’s not happening. Your kid can bat .800 and pitch strikeouts only and they’re not making it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see so many parents in our little league who are the crazy sports parents that get discussed here often. They’re overly invested in their kids’ performance, very up to date on who is getting picked for what, gossiping about the kids and the coaches. It goes on and on.
I do not under any circumstance want to be one of those people. I have one kid who is just average, but my younger kid seems to be the best on his team and people keep bringing up the possibility of him being on the summer all star teams etc. Suddenly I found myself thinking about this a lot, even though objectively I don’t really care. I don’t even like baseball that much! And we have a ton of other things we could do with our time other than sit at baseball fields all summer.
How do I stop myself from falling into the crazy sport parent world before it really starts. Just stop engaging with people? Ignore it when it comes up? Redirect myself when I start thinking about it?
All Stars is 7 days a week of practices and games and travel for the tournament. And it is legitimately fun for the kids who love the game. There is a lot of pomp and circumstance- the kids walk in the Fourth of July parade together and get awards and bling rings. People try to make it special for the kids because it is special. For the nerd parents- they research all of the rules and stats. For the crafty parents- so much swag is made! For the food parents- so much potlucking!
I mention this because I know it seems to be “crazy” to obsess over it but the kids take it so seriously too. When they go back to school- they wear the all stars hats and jerseys to class. (Our league has them customized and everything.). The whole school knows who made the team- it’s very much a thing.
But it’s also ephemeral. And every baseball parent looks back on it fondly. I know you think it’s crazy- but it’s just a magical time of raw emotion for these kids. It’s a huge level of growth too.
I hope you will reconsider it next year if you have the opportunity. Your kid, if they love the sport, might ask and I hope you give it a shot.
You put crazy in quotes, but yeah it is literally crazy, every thing you said here is wild! No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband isn’t a coach and isn’t best friends with a coach or a lobbyist with the coach, your kid isn’t making the all star team. It doesn’t matter how good they are. Truly, stop thinking about it and hope that your child goes on vacation before all the kids start talking about it. The team is predetermined by the appointed coach of the team. He will pick his drinking buddies’ kids. Your child is not going to make it. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. If you don’t have a penis, and a baseball related favor to give their kid in return they’re not picking you. Tell your kid that all star is rigged and it’s not the best players and move on. Seriously. It’s not happening. Your kid can bat .800 and pitch strikeouts only and they’re not making it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see so many parents in our little league who are the crazy sports parents that get discussed here often. They’re overly invested in their kids’ performance, very up to date on who is getting picked for what, gossiping about the kids and the coaches. It goes on and on.
I do not under any circumstance want to be one of those people. I have one kid who is just average, but my younger kid seems to be the best on his team and people keep bringing up the possibility of him being on the summer all star teams etc. Suddenly I found myself thinking about this a lot, even though objectively I don’t really care. I don’t even like baseball that much! And we have a ton of other things we could do with our time other than sit at baseball fields all summer.
How do I stop myself from falling into the crazy sport parent world before it really starts. Just stop engaging with people? Ignore it when it comes up? Redirect myself when I start thinking about it?
All Stars is 7 days a week of practices and games and travel for the tournament. And it is legitimately fun for the kids who love the game. There is a lot of pomp and circumstance- the kids walk in the Fourth of July parade together and get awards and bling rings. People try to make it special for the kids because it is special. For the nerd parents- they research all of the rules and stats. For the crafty parents- so much swag is made! For the food parents- so much potlucking!
I mention this because I know it seems to be “crazy” to obsess over it but the kids take it so seriously too. When they go back to school- they wear the all stars hats and jerseys to class. (Our league has them customized and everything.). The whole school knows who made the team- it’s very much a thing.
But it’s also ephemeral. And every baseball parent looks back on it fondly. I know you think it’s crazy- but it’s just a magical time of raw emotion for these kids. It’s a huge level of growth too.
I hope you will reconsider it next year if you have the opportunity. Your kid, if they love the sport, might ask and I hope you give it a shot.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband isn’t a coach and isn’t best friends with a coach or a lobbyist with the coach, your kid isn’t making the all star team. It doesn’t matter how good they are. Truly, stop thinking about it and hope that your child goes on vacation before all the kids start talking about it. The team is predetermined by the appointed coach of the team. He will pick his drinking buddies’ kids. Your child is not going to make it. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. If you don’t have a penis, and a baseball related favor to give their kid in return they’re not picking you. Tell your kid that all star is rigged and it’s not the best players and move on. Seriously. It’s not happening. Your kid can bat .800 and pitch strikeouts only and they’re not making it.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband isn’t a coach and isn’t best friends with a coach or a lobbyist with the coach, your kid isn’t making the all star team. It doesn’t matter how good they are. Truly, stop thinking about it and hope that your child goes on vacation before all the kids start talking about it. The team is predetermined by the appointed coach of the team. He will pick his drinking buddies’ kids. Your child is not going to make it. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. If you don’t have a penis, and a baseball related favor to give their kid in return they’re not picking you. Tell your kid that all star is rigged and it’s not the best players and move on. Seriously. It’s not happening. Your kid can bat .800 and pitch strikeouts only and they’re not making it.
Anonymous wrote:I see so many parents in our little league who are the crazy sports parents that get discussed here often. They’re overly invested in their kids’ performance, very up to date on who is getting picked for what, gossiping about the kids and the coaches. It goes on and on.
I do not under any circumstance want to be one of those people. I have one kid who is just average, but my younger kid seems to be the best on his team and people keep bringing up the possibility of him being on the summer all star teams etc. Suddenly I found myself thinking about this a lot, even though objectively I don’t really care. I don’t even like baseball that much! And we have a ton of other things we could do with our time other than sit at baseball fields all summer.
How do I stop myself from falling into the crazy sport parent world before it really starts. Just stop engaging with people? Ignore it when it comes up? Redirect myself when I start thinking about it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly just stay in Rec. Say no to travel. I don’t think there is any way to avoid the craziness of it otherwise. There is no way to avoid pressure for private lessons, indoor facilities memberships, $500 bats, etc. The easiest way is to just not do down that road to begin with. I’m in the process of unwinding it all and regret ever doing it.
I find the LL parents (the subset that gossips, overly cares, etc.) way more crazy than anything in travel. It's more insular and the same kids year after year. You could not pay me to do LL All-Stars.
+100
I found LL to have WAY crazier parents than travel. Especially anything to do with all stars. So much drama. There are some crazy parents in travel as well- but at least you have the option to switch teams if it gets to be too much.
Also not all “travel” ball (especially at the younger ages) is super expensive or terribly more consuming than LL. Many younger teams just play in local doubleheader leagues and do a few local tournaments (maybe traveling a few hours away a few times per year).
So our town had their all-star team go to the LLWS two years ago. You would not believe the next-level drama this stoked during their run up to the World Series and then the two years after. Parents of 5 year olds have realized the power that coaches eventually have to get kids into all-stars, so they’re all but fighting to be assistant coach #2 in tee ball so they can get their kid on the inside from day 1. Parents of 10-11 year olds have turned gossipy and generally psycho, and the entire baseball cohort of boys ages 8-11 at school are known as instigators of fights and arguments, overly competitive, and trash talkers and bullies.
The kids and parents outside of LL are not like this at all.