Anonymous wrote:Having had a baseball kid that is playing in college, if I had to do it again, I would seriously consider living in Atlanta.
During the Summer, the three most prominent tournaments are in Atlanta (2) and Birmingham. During the Fall, the most prominent tournament is the PG tournament in Florida (Ft. Myers, Jupiter Beach or Palm Beach depending on age).
If you live in Atlanta, even the FL tournament is a quick trip.
I fall into the camp that I don't mind traveling a little...but it would have been nice to just drive down the street to many of these tournaments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mid 20s son, having now graduated and played his sport in college, is back in the area for work. His friends? The young men he played on his travel teams with for years.
My friends? Several of the mothers of those young men. Not all of the people are awful (some are), and if your kid loves a sport and wants to play it at a fairly high level, that's what you do.
My son FWIW is still playing it, just in men's leagues now. He contemplated going post college to play in Europe but ultimately decided he should get started on his career.
Yuck. Talk about living through your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I realize this is a troll post, but I can’t help myself.
OP, imagine whatever activity your kid likes best.
They get the opportunity to do it three or four times in a single weekend with a dozen or so friends, plus a couple of group meals, and ideally a stay in a hotel with an indoor pool where they get to spend evenings together.
Is it really that hard to understand that kids might really enjoy something like that?
This is exactly what tournament weekends are like. My kids do love it. We didn’t drive 800 miles. We had a tournament 50 miles away and one was local. Win or lose they are leaning important life lessons.
Like how to stay in a crappy Hampton Inn in Podunk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mid 20s son, having now graduated and played his sport in college, is back in the area for work. His friends? The young men he played on his travel teams with for years.
My friends? Several of the mothers of those young men. Not all of the people are awful (some are), and if your kid loves a sport and wants to play it at a fairly high level, that's what you do.
My son FWIW is still playing it, just in men's leagues now. He contemplated going post college to play in Europe but ultimately decided he should get started on his career.
Yuck. Talk about living through your kids.
Anonymous wrote:For the baseball parents who went to the out of state tournaments - how important are these for college recruiting? I have a an 8th grader and we have only traveled to a couple driving tournaments and I am trying to manage expectations for high school. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:For the baseball parents who went to the out of state tournaments - how important are these for college recruiting? I have a an 8th grader and we have only traveled to a couple driving tournaments and I am trying to manage expectations for high school. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:My mid 20s son, having now graduated and played his sport in college, is back in the area for work. His friends? The young men he played on his travel teams with for years.
My friends? Several of the mothers of those young men. Not all of the people are awful (some are), and if your kid loves a sport and wants to play it at a fairly high level, that's what you do.
My son FWIW is still playing it, just in men's leagues now. He contemplated going post college to play in Europe but ultimately decided he should get started on his career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems like most of our friends and acquaintances whose kids play travel sports are always saying "They Love It" after describing a three day weekend of driving a total of 800 miles, eating crappy fast food in the car three meals a day and playing in 3 different tournament games. It always sounds very defensive as if they're trying to justify spending a weekend in this fashion.
I know some of these kids might legit love doing this for the love of the game, but how many others are simply being pushed to do all this by their parents? Travel sports seem to be getting completely out of control, and it's hard to believe that so many families are happy to be spending their weekends this way. I feel like parents we've known for years become completely obsessed with these travel leagues once they join, and the sport becomes their life.
Anyone else get this "They Love It" statement from a travel sports parent?
So your kid is not athletic and can't make a travel team you say?
You got the money you will find a travel team to take your money.
Anonymous wrote:Having had a baseball kid that is playing in college, if I had to do it again, I would seriously consider living in Atlanta.
During the Summer, the three most prominent tournaments are in Atlanta (2) and Birmingham. During the Fall, the most prominent tournament is the PG tournament in Florida (Ft. Myers, Jupiter Beach or Palm Beach depending on age).
If you live in Atlanta, even the FL tournament is a quick trip.
I fall into the camp that I don't mind traveling a little...but it would have been nice to just drive down the street to many of these tournaments.