Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay away from the Stars organization if you can help it. Not well managed, and little to no help with recruiting. If your kid is interested in playing in college, you can do better going to camps/showcases while playing on a travel team that doesn't cost nearly as much. Make a connection at the camp/showcase/via email and then let the RC know where your team is playing. Esp before junior year attending camps like ShowBall, etc. is where you can make some contacts if you aren't focused.
How much does Stars cost for a season? My kid is playing in another organization that costs $1800/season. Trying to see how that stacks up against others.
Anonymous wrote:Stay away from the Stars organization if you can help it. Not well managed, and little to no help with recruiting. If your kid is interested in playing in college, you can do better going to camps/showcases while playing on a travel team that doesn't cost nearly as much. Make a connection at the camp/showcase/via email and then let the RC know where your team is playing. Esp before junior year attending camps like ShowBall, etc. is where you can make some contacts if you aren't focused.
Anonymous wrote:You seriously think that a C student, non-rigorous courses, ie no APs and lousy SATs are going to get you into HA schools? Maybe if you're a phenom............but then why would you target those schools vs getting into the draft pool? P
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This depends on your goal.
If you seriously think your child could play D1 baseball for the likes of UVA or Alabama, then he is going to spend a lot time traveling to showcases in FL, GA, NC, NJ, etc., trying to attract the attention of college coaches. Of course, if your child is really going to play for UVA or Alabama, you would probably already know this by the end of sophomore year. Look at the commits for classes of 2023 and 2024 at Virginia Stars or Bethesda Big Train. Your son's time commitment after getting the college offer is to keep up his skills and avoid blowing out his arm.
However, if your goal is an Ivy/high academic DIII like Swarthmore, then there is less of a time commitment. Programs like Bradley Baseball Academy that focus on this market are not traveling across the country, and there are fewer showcases like Head First that focus on this market. DIII doesn't give scholarships (but they do give tuition discounts), but if you look at the college section of this forum you will see the real value of getting a DIII baseball offer from the likes of Johns Hopkins or Williams: you don't have to suffer through the trauma of the application process in senior year!
That said, virtually all of the baseball boys we have met over the years have excellent time management skills and have been able to balance AP and honors classes with their baseball commitments. It helps that baseball is a more cerebral sport than the reactive sports of soccer, basketball, etc. Of course AP science courses are more difficult time-wise to reconcile with baseball, but this true of all sports.
Re the bolded - what in the world are you talking about?
I’m not pp, but I assume what they’re referring to is that being a recruited athlete gives you earlier notification and a better chance of admission. If your goal is to attend a top tier college, being recruited to play a sport there makes the admissions cycle much less stressful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stay away from the Stars organization if you can help it. Not well managed, and little to no help with recruiting. If your kid is interested in playing in college, you can do better going to camps/showcases while playing on a travel team that doesn't cost nearly as much. Make a connection at the camp/showcase/via email and then let the RC know where your team is playing. Esp before junior year attending camps like ShowBall, etc. is where you can make some contacts if you aren't focused.
How much does Stars cost for a season? My kid is playing in another organization that costs $1800/season. Trying to see how that stacks up against others.
Anonymous wrote:Stay away from the Stars organization if you can help it. Not well managed, and little to no help with recruiting. If your kid is interested in playing in college, you can do better going to camps/showcases while playing on a travel team that doesn't cost nearly as much. Make a connection at the camp/showcase/via email and then let the RC know where your team is playing. Esp before junior year attending camps like ShowBall, etc. is where you can make some contacts if you aren't focused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This depends on your goal.
If you seriously think your child could play D1 baseball for the likes of UVA or Alabama, then he is going to spend a lot time traveling to showcases in FL, GA, NC, NJ, etc., trying to attract the attention of college coaches. Of course, if your child is really going to play for UVA or Alabama, you would probably already know this by the end of sophomore year. Look at the commits for classes of 2023 and 2024 at Virginia Stars or Bethesda Big Train. Your son's time commitment after getting the college offer is to keep up his skills and avoid blowing out his arm.
However, if your goal is an Ivy/high academic DIII like Swarthmore, then there is less of a time commitment. Programs like Bradley Baseball Academy that focus on this market are not traveling across the country, and there are fewer showcases like Head First that focus on this market. DIII doesn't give scholarships (but they do give tuition discounts), but if you look at the college section of this forum you will see the real value of getting a DIII baseball offer from the likes of Johns Hopkins or Williams: you don't have to suffer through the trauma of the application process in senior year!
That said, virtually all of the baseball boys we have met over the years have excellent time management skills and have been able to balance AP and honors classes with their baseball commitments. It helps that baseball is a more cerebral sport than the reactive sports of soccer, basketball, etc. Of course AP science courses are more difficult time-wise to reconcile with baseball, but this true of all sports.
Re the bolded - what in the world are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:This depends on your goal.
If you seriously think your child could play D1 baseball for the likes of UVA or Alabama, then he is going to spend a lot time traveling to showcases in FL, GA, NC, NJ, etc., trying to attract the attention of college coaches. Of course, if your child is really going to play for UVA or Alabama, you would probably already know this by the end of sophomore year. Look at the commits for classes of 2023 and 2024 at Virginia Stars or Bethesda Big Train. Your son's time commitment after getting the college offer is to keep up his skills and avoid blowing out his arm.
However, if your goal is an Ivy/high academic DIII like Swarthmore, then there is less of a time commitment. Programs like Bradley Baseball Academy that focus on this market are not traveling across the country, and there are fewer showcases like Head First that focus on this market. DIII doesn't give scholarships (but they do give tuition discounts), but if you look at the college section of this forum you will see the real value of getting a DIII baseball offer from the likes of Johns Hopkins or Williams: you don't have to suffer through the trauma of the application process in senior year!
That said, virtually all of the baseball boys we have met over the years have excellent time management skills and have been able to balance AP and honors classes with their baseball commitments. It helps that baseball is a more cerebral sport than the reactive sports of soccer, basketball, etc. Of course AP science courses are more difficult time-wise to reconcile with baseball, but this true of all sports.
Anonymous wrote:Regarding DIII, here is a real life story.
We know of a boy from a Hawaii private school (Punahou?) who didn't make his varsity team as a junior. He went with his HI-based travel team to play in tournaments in VA and CA last summer.
After the trip, he got an offer to play at Grinnell College in Iowa, which US News ranks #13 for LACs. The boy is 5'7", 160 lbs, and plays OF.
The point is that if you keep trying and you aim properly, you can hit your target!