Anonymous wrote:Never for baseball.
My son and his friends have high level played travel ball for 6 years (on top of Little League for the first 4) and we have no idea if any of them will make their high school teams.
These are kids who have lived and breathed baseball for the better part of a decade. It's just so competitive in this area. It stinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you might want to ask people in your local HS pyramid, because based on the responses above, I think this varies a lot. At our Maryland school, baseball isn't really that competitive. (My sense is that it may be MUCH more competitive in Virginia than MD, but it may just be our school.) On the other hand, lacrosse is perhaps the most competitive team to get on, period. And football is walk-on (large team and parents/kids shying away due to head injury threat).
+1. This is very dependant on the school. At some high schools almost everyone makes the team. At other schools, boys need to hit an 80 mph fastball to make the team. No matter how coordinated and fast twitch, a kid who has never played is not going to be able to do that. At DS's high school, 60 kids who have been playing travel ball since they were 10 will tryout for 9 roster slots. I've never heard of a kid who hasn't played make the team. Don't invest in private lessons if your kid is going to this type of school.
Anonymous wrote:I think you might want to ask people in your local HS pyramid, because based on the responses above, I think this varies a lot. At our Maryland school, baseball isn't really that competitive. (My sense is that it may be MUCH more competitive in Virginia than MD, but it may just be our school.) On the other hand, lacrosse is perhaps the most competitive team to get on, period. And football is walk-on (large team and parents/kids shying away due to head injury threat).
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT write off baseball. There are two types of people in the world, those that can hit a pitch and those that can not.
If you have the ability to hit, you can go out for baseball for the first time your freshman year of HS and make the team.
That also means that you son can play even rec league ball in 6th or 7th or 8th and figure out if he can hit or not.
Growing up I watched my two brothers play. They were really close in age, one the oldest of his year and the other the youngest in the same year.
The older one really wanted to play and was on every team he could find from the time he was 6.
He saved all his money and bought a pitching machine to practice during the 8th grade. He needed it despite all the years of work and being a solid infielder.
My 2nd brother had never played because my first brother had been bigger the year they turned 6 and he felt intimidated.
Well by the time the pitching machine arrived they were close to the same size. I don't know how my 2nd brother ended up trying to hit the machine but it was like watching a second machine.
He never missed from the moment he picked up the bat. OK, I admit it wasn't the fastest or fanciest pitching machine but still he completely outclassed his brother despite all his experience.
My first brother talked him into going out for baseball his freshman year. They both played that year and on JV as sophomores.
As juniors, my first brother's obvious inability as a hitter got him cut and my second brother just stopped going to practice when that happened.
The rumor was that the coach had joked that if he could have melded my two brothers together the resulting player could have made the major leagues.
Anonymous wrote:Another poster saying not to write off baseball. My friend's son in Falls Church made the HS baseball team after just a couple years of rec baseball in the different non-baseball area.