Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can younger kids play a spring sport like baseball and also AAU basketball or does it turn out to be too much?
I know several fourth graders doing travel soccer and little league along with AAU
Anonymous wrote:Can younger kids play a spring sport like baseball and also AAU basketball or does it turn out to be too much?
Anonymous wrote:Can younger kids play a spring sport like baseball and also AAU basketball or does it turn out to be too much?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
It depends on the player and the team. A top AAU team is higher level than a good high school team, a top high school team is probably as high as a top AAU team.
I actually had a conversation with a college coach about what they value. My kid was in a great situation on his AAU. Team, but playing behind 5 kids who ended up on power 5 D1 teams for his high school team, so he didn’t get playing time. The college coach said he wouldn’t look at a kid who didn’t play for his high school team. Basketball is not like other sports in this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
But when kids have school teams they usually leave AAU for winter season and sometimes their school teams play together as AAU teams in the offseason.
Right, which supports the concept of the main season for basketball being winter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
It depends on the player and the team. A top AAU team is higher level than a good high school team, a top high school team is probably as high as a top AAU team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
But when kids have school teams they usually leave AAU for winter season and sometimes their school teams play together as AAU teams in the offseason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most AAU teams play all year…
Yes the better younger teams (usually from Maryland) and older teams play year round, but that doesn’t work well for multi sport kids. We turned down a team offer once we determined the coach would end team by summer to coach other fall sports. Our DC makes time to play rec soccer too but basketball is number one. Kids that don’t consistently practice and play year round are first to be benched or cut once they rejoin a team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer
And “AAU” is not the end all/be all. High school and college basketball play in the winter. Basketball is traditionally a winter sport.
Anonymous wrote:Most AAU teams play all year…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How is winter off season for basketball?
AAU is spring/summer