Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is more to do with younger kids not being separated from their peers early on into the sport. Forcing 1/4 of a grade to play up with an older class was never a good idea. Plus study after study has proven that opportunity heavily skews towards the oldest quartile with the youngest getting less attention and coaching especially early on in a sport when it matters most. So telling the oldest girls in a class they have to be the youngest in their sports classification was incredibly awkward. 5th grader competing against a 6th grader is way different than kids who have gone through their growth spurts competing in HS.
Anonymous wrote:From the chatter I have seen online it seems like people's perspectives on this change depend entirely on:
1) How old their kids/teams are (younger kids think it's a bigger deal while older kids don't care because the distribution is already more about talent than age)
2) How good their kid is (better teams/kids care less because they may already be playing up anyway)
My Fall birthday 5th grader on a 12U travel team has been playing against 7th graders who have gone through puberty. It has been ridiculous so very happy for this change.
Anonymous wrote:This is more to do with younger kids not being separated from their peers early on into the sport. Forcing 1/4 of a grade to play up with an older class was never a good idea. Plus study after study has proven that opportunity heavily skews towards the oldest quartile with the youngest getting less attention and coaching especially early on in a sport when it matters most. So telling the oldest girls in a class they have to be the youngest in their sports classification was incredibly awkward. 5th grader competing against a 6th grader is way different than kids who have gone through their growth spurts competing in HS.
Anonymous wrote:From the chatter I have seen online it seems like people's perspectives on this change depend entirely on:
1) How old their kids/teams are (younger kids think it's a bigger deal while older kids don't care because the distribution is already more about talent than age)
2) How good their kid is (better teams/kids care less because they may already be playing up anyway)
Anonymous wrote:From the chatter I have seen online it seems like people's perspectives on this change depend entirely on:
1) How old their kids/teams are (younger kids think it's a bigger deal while older kids don't care because the distribution is already more about talent than age)
2) How good their kid is (better teams/kids care less because they may already be playing up anyway)
Anonymous wrote:From the chatter I have seen online it seems like people's perspectives on this change depend entirely on:
1) How old their kids/teams are (younger kids think it's a bigger deal while older kids don't care because the distribution is already more about talent than age)
2) How good their kid is (better teams/kids care less because they may already be playing up anyway)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s official
https://www.usssa.com/fastpitch/newsRead/?id=22651
Hooray, my fall b-day kid will be so happy to finally be able to play with classmates. Thank you USSSA!
Anonymous wrote:It’s official
https://www.usssa.com/fastpitch/newsRead/?id=22651
Anonymous wrote:Our PGF (west coast) just changed, so I'd imagine USSSA will too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baseball is totally different than fast pitch possibly driven by long standing little league age rules which mirror school grades
The biggest difference between baseball and softball is that baseball has tryouts for the kids to advance to the higher levels based on skills rather than birth year or grades. I found baseball to be better in this respect. Award the best players with promotions and allow the players who are new and/or still figuring it out to stay down a level for another season.
Anonymous wrote:Baseball is totally different than fast pitch possibly driven by long standing little league age rules which mirror school grades
Anonymous wrote:Our PGF (west coast) just changed, so I'd imagine USSSA will too.