Anonymous wrote:NWDC travel teams are Win Within and DC Dynasty. Tryouts for the fall for both were in June (Win Within) and July (Dynasty) and are set for the fall. All these kids also play little league (generally through NWLL or Cap City--depending on where they live). I don't know of any boys (under age 13) who just do travel ball.
It's hard to break in to Win Within over u10 as their teams form then and generally stay the same unless someone moves They're very loyal to returning players. Dynasty has added a team at the u11 or u12 level which adds spots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it necessary to do travel baseball to get looked at by high school coaches?
No. For one thing, most serious travel players don't play high school. The talented kids chasing scholarships gravitate to travel/select leagues because it's easier for scouts to go to good travel tournaments than chase a bunch of high schools. Same thing for fastpitch softball.
I think it depends on where you are. In our area, there's a direct connection between the high school coaches and the travel programs. Having said that, I think where there isn't as much of a connection is between playing in high school and playing in college; there's much more of a connection between playing travel and playing in college (which I think is what you're getting at).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it necessary to do travel baseball to get looked at by high school coaches?
No. For one thing, most serious travel players don't play high school. The talented kids chasing scholarships gravitate to travel/select leagues because it's easier for scouts to go to good travel tournaments than chase a bunch of high schools. Same thing for fastpitch softball.
Anonymous wrote:Is it necessary to do travel baseball to get looked at by high school coaches?
Anonymous wrote:We've found a major positive of travel ball is having paid (not dad) coaches. Dad coaches are rarely impartial especially in baseball where some positions are more valued than others. In soccer it doesn't matter as much because the only variable at play is playing time. In baseball the coaches' kids are often the pitchers and catchers regardless of their skill. It gets frustrating. Travel is much better in this regard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the cost of travel baseball depends greatly on the program. We have kids in both travel baseball and soccer and baseball is much cheaper.
It does take more time though---about 5 hours each Sunday for a double header vs 1 hour on Sunday for a soccer game.
PP here-I can completely see that this is true. For us, it wasn't even just the double headers that took up a ton of time, but the winter practices were difficult, too. There was literally never a break from baseball, except for maybe two or three weeks in the summer. I understand that travel sports require a higher level of committment, but at some point, it can really just be too much.
PP, did your kids wind up playing in h.s.? Are they playing any baseball now? If not, at what age did they stop?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the cost of travel baseball depends greatly on the program. We have kids in both travel baseball and soccer and baseball is much cheaper.
It does take more time though---about 5 hours each Sunday for a double header vs 1 hour on Sunday for a soccer game.
PP here-I can completely see that this is true. For us, it wasn't even just the double headers that took up a ton of time, but the winter practices were difficult, too. There was literally never a break from baseball, except for maybe two or three weeks in the summer. I understand that travel sports require a higher level of committment, but at some point, it can really just be too much.
Anonymous wrote:I think the cost of travel baseball depends greatly on the program. We have kids in both travel baseball and soccer and baseball is much cheaper.
It does take more time though---about 5 hours each Sunday for a double header vs 1 hour on Sunday for a soccer game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it necessary to do travel baseball to get looked at by high school coaches?
i'm interested in this. I think probably yes just because kids generally don't get to be really good just by playing Little League games (8 fall games, 12 spring games plus play-offs). Playing travel ball in addition to Little League adds in another 16-20 games per season (or 40 games a year).