Anonymous wrote:If you hit you play.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He’s fairly athletic and tall for his age. Picks up most sports quickly but behind in baseball for sure. Just wondering what he can do until tryouts to help raise his level.
—get some hitting lessons, and then practice hitting on a tee in the backyard
—look up some drills for footwork in the outfield or quick pick up for infield positions(depending on what he plays) there are drills like bouncing a ball off the wall and scooping it with the glove
—have him read or watch games. Situational awareness, knowing when and where to throw the ball, when to run and steal etc, are key at high school level
Anonymous wrote:He’s fairly athletic and tall for his age. Picks up most sports quickly but behind in baseball for sure. Just wondering what he can do until tryouts to help raise his level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you hit you don't sit. That's always going to be the rule. Oh and pitching, you can never have enough kids who throw 80-ish (which is where you need to be as a freshman these days.)
Another route is catching - most teams need better athletes at catcher and you need 2 for each team so that ups the numbers over say meh outfielders.
Wow, well he's nowhere near that in pitching however he is a good hitter and has speed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he is an infielder, Gold Glove Academy infield sessions are a great way to get lots of reps without playing actual games on a travel team.
Otherwise, get plenty of BP and tee time, hit the weight room, and get fast.
Like others have said, have realistic expectations depending on the school.
Gold Glove Academy is great! My son enjoys it when he goes. They also periodically do hitting groups.
I don't know if your son used a USA bat for Juniors but if so, definitely switch to BBCOR now.
If interested in pitching, our HS puts a big emphasis on offspeed (particularly change ups). Obviously every coach loves a fastball that will intimidate hitters but working on a good offspeed or breaking ball will be good. My son sits mid-70s for his FB which is not fast for a 15 year old but his breaking balls are really good.
If you're in the West Springfield, Robinson, or Lake Braddock pyramids, those are very tough to make, even JV.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:If you hit you don't sit. That's always going to be the rule. Oh and pitching, you can never have enough kids who throw 80-ish (which is where you need to be as a freshman these days.)
Another route is catching - most teams need better athletes at catcher and you need 2 for each team so that ups the numbers over say meh outfielders.
Anonymous wrote:If he is an infielder, Gold Glove Academy infield sessions are a great way to get lots of reps without playing actual games on a travel team.
Otherwise, get plenty of BP and tee time, hit the weight room, and get fast.
Like others have said, have realistic expectations depending on the school.
Anonymous wrote:If he is an infielder, Gold Glove Academy infield sessions are a great way to get lots of reps without playing actual games on a travel team.
Otherwise, get plenty of BP and tee time, hit the weight room, and get fast.
Like others have said, have realistic expectations depending on the school.
Anonymous wrote:All-Stars? Has he only played Little League or something? That field is 46-60 (mound/bases distance in feet). No leads, no pickoffs. Little kid rules.
Travel Baseball at age 10+ moves up to a 50-70 field with leads, pickoffs, etc. -- real baseball. This also applies to Babe Ruth, Cal Ripken, and Pony Rec leagues.
Age 13+ is 60-90 diamond, same dimensions as Nats Park, college, high school, etc.
The longer throws as the field gets bigger are REAL -- gotta have proper mechanics to be accurate and strong. Mentally, so much more going on with the real baseball rules compared to Little League.
What has your son played?