Anonymous wrote:Indeed, some players have left.
It seems the machine rolls on though, with the kids who want to be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too many parents think high-level high school baseball should have the same rules as Little League, where everyone is guaranteed playing time. These are the parents who leave SJC. Sorry, but he plays his best players. Your kid wasn’t one of them.
The top college baseball teams don’t even operate like SJC. If UNC plays a non-conference Wednesday game against Princeton, they don’t play all their top players, but rather give other players time who they want to develop.
You do know that James Wood who is an MLB all star also left SJC after just one year, right?
I dont believe that is accurate about James Wood- I think he was there for 2 if not 3 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too many parents think high-level high school baseball should have the same rules as Little League, where everyone is guaranteed playing time. These are the parents who leave SJC. Sorry, but he plays his best players. Your kid wasn’t one of them.
The top college baseball teams don’t even operate like SJC. If UNC plays a non-conference Wednesday game against Princeton, they don’t play all their top players, but rather give other players time who they want to develop.
You do know that James Wood who is an MLB all star also left SJC after just one year, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too many parents think high-level high school baseball should have the same rules as Little League, where everyone is guaranteed playing time. These are the parents who leave SJC. Sorry, but he plays his best players. Your kid wasn’t one of them.
The top college baseball teams don’t even operate like SJC. If UNC plays a non-conference Wednesday game against Princeton, they don’t play all their top players, but rather give other players time who they want to develop.
You do know that James Wood who is an MLB all star also left SJC after just one year, right?
Anonymous wrote:Too many parents think high-level high school baseball should have the same rules as Little League, where everyone is guaranteed playing time. These are the parents who leave SJC. Sorry, but he plays his best players. Your kid wasn’t one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Too many parents think high-level high school baseball should have the same rules as Little League, where everyone is guaranteed playing time. These are the parents who leave SJC. Sorry, but he plays his best players. Your kid wasn’t one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are dozens of schools where your child will find a successful path to a good hs education, fulfilling hs career, and a college roster. There is no reason to roll the dice with a controversial coach or years on the bench. Make a list of schools that are an academic fit and not a horrible commute, and meet with those coaches. You’ll find a fit. You don’t need a big baseball program for your kid to play college baseball. Colleges come to watch specific players - if they’re interested in your kid they’ll watch him no matter what team he’s on (and it will rarely be during the hs season anyway)
This is the right answer. SJC, Gonzaga, DJO are great baseball programs in the WCAC, but there are strong programs that consistently send kids to D1 from STA, Landon, Prep, Potomac, Flint Hill. Find the school, figure out if the team will work for your kid, and decide whether you want to join a program that runs all baseball training through the school or if your kid is better off training outside of the school time.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you want private for other reasons, if it is just for baseball - may as well go public. Results for recruiting are the same.
Anonymous wrote:Many people are frustrated with how the SJC coach runs the team. Word is that he will finally leave in two years when his youngest kid (daughter) graduates from SJC.
He basically only plays the starters and/or his favorites, even if they are beating an opponent by 15 runs.
What's nuts is that he had a junior lefty pitcher committed to play at Tennessee...and he only gave that kid like 5 innings all season because he loved his 2025 star pitchers (three in particular who are also D1...but TN is usually a top 5 college team).
SJC lost a number of rising juniors who will likely be starters at their new schools because of how he runs the team.[/quote]
SJC has lost a number of rising juniors (and Seniors! in other sports) who are going to be starts at their new schools.
The fact that Seniors are transferring says something about the school
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many people are frustrated with how the SJC coach runs the team. Word is that he will finally leave in two years when his youngest kid (daughter) graduates from SJC.
He basically only plays the starters and/or his favorites, even if they are beating an opponent by 15 runs.
What's nuts is that he had a junior lefty pitcher committed to play at Tennessee...and he only gave that kid like 5 innings all season because he loved his 2025 star pitchers (three in particular who are also D1...but TN is usually a top 5 college team).
SJC lost a number of rising juniors who will likely be starters at their new schools because of how he runs the team.
The SJC coach very explicitly lays out his rules to incoming players and parents. They know that playing time is not guaranteed, and that if they want to be on the team, the players must take part in the coach’s camps. There is no gray area, and the players know exactly where they stand. A lot of parents simply cannot handle the fact that their kid simply isn’t the next Paul Skenes.
We know parents who sent their kid elsewhere for this school year because he wasn’t playing much, but the real reason is that the parents kept sending their kid to these camps where he was encouraged to put excessive wear on his arm. He kept getting hurt and the coach wouldn’t play him, so he’s with a much lesser high school program this year.