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10U AA Select Baseball - Katy, TX

6,208 Views | 44 Replies | Last: 4 yr ago by Your Mom And Them
fulshearAg96
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I was curious what TexAgs opinion was on select baseball?
Marauder Blue 6
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A bunch of parents wasting a lot of $$$ forcing their kids to live someone else's dream because they can't be honest about how much talent their kid has.
TarponChaser
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Like everything else, it depends on a lot of factors.
cab559
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What happened to the original thread in this?
. . .
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Quote:

TexAgs opinion on select baseball
https://texags.com/forums/12/topics/3052865/
Milwaukees Best Light
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About like most things, I am sure it was a good and beneficial thing when it first started, but has since become a huge self feeding racket. Investing all that that is typically invested into kids who haven't hit puberty yet is absurd. Having a professional hitting instructor to groove in their swing at that age is a bit useless when their arms and legs are each gonna double in size in short order.

Its your money and time, and I don't really care how you spend either. I think it is crazy to invest that much of each into one activity for a kid that age. I sincerely hope my son doesn't want to go that route. Not sure what I will do if he wants to, has some talent and is genuinely having fun.
drumboy
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Milwaukees Best Light said:

About like most things, I am sure it was a good and beneficial thing when it first started, but has since become a huge self feeding racket. Investing all that that is typically invested into kids who haven't hit puberty yet is absurd. Having a professional hitting instructor to groove in their swing at that age is a bit useless when their arms and legs are each gonna double in size in short order.

Its your money and time, and I don't really care how you spend either. I think it is crazy to invest that much of each into one activity for a kid that age. I sincerely hope my son doesn't want to go that route. Not sure what I will do if he wants to, has some talent and is genuinely having fun.

DO YOU NOT LOVE YOUR KIDS?!!!!
Aggie
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Staff gonna come in and delete all the replies again?
Already did once
Ducks4brkfast
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Kinda blows my mind how competitive baseball is out here.

My biggest issue with select baseball at a young age is the sacrifice kids make at the expense of other sports.

IMO kids should be playing multiple sports at a young age. Not baseball year round.
WES2006AG
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10 is too young. Your kid isn't falling behind, seriously.
Mas89
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Marauder Blue 6 said:

A bunch of parents wasting a lot of $$$ forcing their kids to live someone else's dream because they can't be honest about how much talent their kid has.
Almost all kids who go to the next level in baseball today- high school, college, pros are playing select ball at an early age in a good program. Obviously only a few continue to advance to the higher levels but the chance and experience is once in a lifetime. Those who don't like it can always go play another sport or hobby. But they had the chance- they won't forget.

A handful of the current A&M baseball team players will be drafted this summer into the pros. One will probably be in the top 10 picks overall. He played select ball and developed into a great pitcher. You should ask Mr. Lacy if he wasted his money on select baseball.
cab559
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I have two boys, with my oldest being 8 years old. The time when their dad rotated from baseball, to soccer, to football, to basketball until the age of 12-13 feels about over even at the age of 8.
Marauder Blue 6
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Mas89 said:

Marauder Blue 6 said:

A bunch of parents wasting a lot of $$$ forcing their kids to live someone else's dream because they can't be honest about how much talent their kid has.
Almost all kids who go to the next level in baseball today- high school, college, pros are playing select ball at an early age in a good program. Obviously only a few continue to advance to the higher levels but the chance and experience is once in a lifetime. Those who don't like it can always go play another sport or hobby. But they had the chance- they won't forget.

A handful of the current A&M baseball team players will be drafted this summer into the pros. One will probably be in the top 10 picks overall. He played select ball and developed into a great pitcher. You should ask Mr. Lacy if he wasted his money on select baseball.
For every Lacy, there are thousands who don't make it and probably aren't even Varsity starters in HS. Major league baseball survived for decades without the Select and travel baseball system. It's not imperative for every kid to travel or go to whatever "World Series" is in vogue. Follow the money. The biggest beneficiaries of the Select and travel teams are the coaches, tournament organizers, league organizers, etc. who've convinced parents that it's necessary for Junior to play with them and that he really does have a chance for a scholarship. I've seen parents who've paid thousands for their kids to participate over several years and their son will probably get a D3 partial scholly in the very best case. I also know a tournament organizer who pockets almost a decent year's salary by hosting a few weekend tournaments over the summer. It's all a racket that does nothing more than steal childhoods from kids and overly ambitious parents with more dollars than sense.
Ducks4brkfast
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Mas89 said:

Marauder Blue 6 said:

A bunch of parents wasting a lot of $$$ forcing their kids to live someone else's dream because they can't be honest about how much talent their kid has.
Almost all kids who go to the next level in baseball today- high school, college, pros are playing select ball at an early age in a good program. Obviously only a few continue to advance to the higher levels but the chance and experience is once in a lifetime. Those who don't like it can always go play another sport or hobby. But they had the chance- they won't forget.

A handful of the current A&M baseball team players will be drafted this summer into the pros. One will probably be in the top 10 picks overall. He played select ball and developed into a great pitcher. You should ask Mr. Lacy if he wasted his money on select baseball.
If you're justification for putting little Breighlynn in year-round select baseball is to help him make the pros, then... well.... perhaps you should take a step back and gain some perspective.

I guess I could see a kid playing a year-round sport because the kid loves it and can't get enough of it.

Not because their dad has "crunched the numbers" and figured the kid's chance of making the major leagues goes from 0.001% -> 0.004%.
cab559
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Yes, this is a business and people are running it to make a profit. I don't think we need to keep arguing this point, especially when you've seen private equity beginning to invest in (buy) clubs and tournament organizers because they are so profitable.
MAS444
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Quote:

You should ask Mr. Lacy if he wasted his money on select baseball.

The point being...what? When your son also gets drafted by the pros it will have been money well spent?
Marauder Blue 6
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cab559 said:

Yes, this is a business and people are running it to make a profit. I don't think we need to keep arguing this point, especially when you've seen private equity beginning to invest in (buy) clubs and tournament organizers because they are so profitable.
If it's a business, then the organizers need to be subject to child labor laws and the players should have labor representation. I doubt they'd be in compliance with the laws and the children are being fairly compensated.
cab559
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TarponChaser
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Ducks4brkfast said:

Kinda blows my mind how competitive baseball is out here.

My biggest issue with select baseball at a young age is the sacrifice kids make at the expense of other sports.

IMO kids should be playing multiple sports at a young age. Not baseball year round.

My 9-year old plays select and started doing so in the spring of 2019. There's a lot of good & bad but you can manage a lot of that. One of the big problems I see in all youth sports is that there's no middle ground anymore between the super competitive travel/select programs and the rec leagues where everybody gets a trophy just for showing up- YMMV but IMHO by the time kids are about 8 years old or so they need to understand that just showing up isn't good enough in life, everything is a competition.

Most, if not all of the kids my boy plays with plays multiple sports. My son decided he didn't want to play soccer anymore this past fall but he does flag football, basketball, and summer track in addition to baseball. He's also into robotics and we spend a lot of time hunting & fishing.

I was opposed to him playing select at this age but after some fairly poor experiences with league ball and seeing the skill level of kids his age who played select and seeing the skill level of a lot of HS kids who all grew up playing select we made the move. The poor experiences were simply being stuck on a team with no coach for 3 seasons in a row so I coached and despite playing college football my baseball acumen is lacking (I googled youth baseball drills and tried to use those myself). And we'd be lucky to get 5 kids to show up to practice, lots of no call/no show BS.

I had parents come up to me and ask, "why isn't Timmy hitting the ball?" And my response was, "well, Timmy needs to come to practice and listen to what we're trying to coach him to do and I can only do so much in an hour or two per week and if you want him to hit you need to help him at home too."

My kid is by no means a stud. But what he is is a really big kid who can run. He's 5'0" 115 and not fat at all. He's not quick yet but once he gets out of low gear he can run, quickness will come with puberty and more muscle development. Right now he's sort of like a St. Bernard puppy who is all legs & paws and trips over his own feet. But he's big and strong and he can hit and he can throw hard but he got a little gun shy because he was throwing with a kid once who couldn't catch and the kid caught it with his face and got a broken nose. That shook my kid up for a while and he tried to throw a lot slower which caused poor accuracy and bad habits. Then one Saturday in the fall of '18 he asked me to call his buddy's dad so we could go to the ballpark and practice. There was an 8U tournament going on at the time and I was absolutely astounded at the skill level of the kids. There were no kids picking flowers or spacing out in the outfield but they were playing ball. He and his buddy who is a really good little athlete (he's one of those kids who's just really coordinated and fluid no matter what sport- my son and his buddy have played soccer & basketball and now baseball together since they were 5) both said they wanted to play with kids like they saw in the tournament.

So we tried out for this past spring and it was up & down. It was coach pitch but he hit well and improved a lot overall. The coaching and reps from coaches who know a helluva lot more than I do helped as did the fact that he learned he could throw it as hard as he wanted and the kids he was throwing to would catch it.

There were ups & downs and the team he was on in the spring was probably .500 but the kids had a lot of fun and improved and made friends. I don't feel that we spent an excessive amount of money either but again, YMMV.

He did play fall ball this past fall because moving up to 9U they go from coach-pitch to kid-pitch and that's a big transition. Kids can now get lead-offs, run on a dropped 3rd strike, pick off moves, etc. The team's improvement from spring to fall was substantial- they went from being about a .500 team to about .700. It definitely got hectic managing flag football, baseball, and soccer for our 5-year old. But it was fun and we still spent a lot of time on the water and in the duck marsh too.

I come from an athletic family (my brother was an Academic All American LB at Sam and our sister lettered 4 years as a swimmer at UH, and my wife could have played volleyball at Angelo State but chose A&M) and I try to take the same approach with my older boy (the younger one isn't old enough to understand yet) that my folks did with me and my siblings:
1) school comes first no matter what
2) have fun
3) be an example of good sportsmanship
4) if you're going to play anything you have to give it your best- basically, you will never get jumped on for going all out, if you're lazy or not paying attention then it's an issue
5) you can never quit on your team- if you don't like a sport or aren't having fun, that's fine you don't have to play anymore once the season is over but you absolutely cannot quit mid-season.

So far my boy loves it- he calls me at work most days wanting to know when I'll be home so we can go hit or play catch. Other days he calls and says he wants to play basketball or toss the football around and that's fun for us too. He got a bow for Christmas so he's learning that and a buddy gave me his starter bow so I'm learning that too. We do some kind of fishing pretty much every week, weather permitting, and he's learning to fly cast while my younger son can handle his Zebco 33 all on his own (mostly).

Like anything else you can get way too into it but it's your job as a parent to keep things in perspective. I want my boys to be gentlemen, be well rounded, understand competition, and have a drive to excel in whatever they do. We also want them to be healthy, active, and spend time with their friends doing stuff kids are supposed to do.
Marauder Blue 6
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Welcome back!
ThunderCougarFalconBird
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TarponChaser said:

(I googled youth baseball drills and tried to use those myself).


You totally blew a huge opportunity:

TarponChaser
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No BS, those old videos with Fred McGriff shilling for them were the first thing I thought of.

I might have even gone out and found a pair of those old Bike brand coaching shorts that have a 6" waistband and a 4" inseam. There may have been striped knee socks too.

RM1993
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My oldest played select ball for a few different teams in the Katy area. The big thing with him was that he loved baseball and when we played Katy American LL you would invariably end up on a team with one or two kids who were decent and enjoyed playing, five or six who could care less and a few that had never played before....and this was at 10 yrs old. Overall, a miserable experience for the few kids who were good and enjoyed playing.

Select ball was much more competitive, but the skill level and desire of the kids playing made it a much more enjoyable experience. You have to pick and choose which type of select team you want to join - dad run team or a coach with no kids on the team who is doing it for a living. Obviously, pros and cons with each and my son played on both types of teams.

If your son enjoys baseball and wants to play competitively, then select is the way to go. You don't have to do it year round and can always alternate in other sports. Yes, it is much more costly than just signing up for LL, but the experience can be (not always) much better for the kiddo as well as the parents.
Gator92
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If your son is motivated to work outside of practice and games, he might be ready for select ball.

The biggest downside to select ball is the tournament format. My son's arm was a noodle by end of May. Just playing the minimum 3 games over a weekend is a lot to ask a 10yr old arm. You could play as many as six. It is a big time commitment.

I agree with what someone else said that there is not much middle ground in Katy. However there are some options. If your only experience is with Katy American, you might want to check out Katy Pony. My son has played both. I have coached both. My experience has been that teams at Pony have better parent involvement and the level of play is more competitive.

That being said...

If I was doing it over at 10U, I would play rec at Katy American and pick up w/ a select team during the season. American doesn't schedule rec games on the weekend and Pony does. Your weekends would be free to stick your toe into select. At 10U there are many teams. They are always looking to pick up players for a tournament. You could probably find room on a team for the remainder of the summer.

If you go all in on select, I would look for a team that is parent coached v paid coach. Not necessarily because of cost. There are different politics to both. Some teams will use a combination of a paid coach and parent volunteers. While other teams have all paid coaches. The one to avoid is the combo. I also think your money is better spent on private lessons. The money you save w/ a parent coached team can be spent on privates.

Good Luck!


98Ag99Grad
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OP started this thread at 12:30am sunday morning. Was obviously drunk/trolling tine board. Well done OP.
Milwaukees Best Light
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98Ag99Grad said:

OP started this thread at 12:30am sunday morning. Was obviously drunk/trolling tine board. Well done OP.
This is not the original thread. OP started a thread of a similar title a day or so before that was about looking for some kids to join his team coached by a bunch of former players. Thread devolved into hate for select sports. Guessing OP got pissed, got staff to remove the thread, then pounded back a few after the kids went to bed and posted this thread.
Al Bula
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Milwaukees Best Light said:

Guessing OP got pissed, got staff to remove the thread, then pounded back a few after the kids went to bed and posted this thread.
Don't you know he just got back from a World Series select tournament in Frisco??
ptothemo
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Tom Emanski videos with outfielders throwing balls into trash cans FTMFW
BohunkAg
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Mas89 said:

Marauder Blue 6 said:

A bunch of parents wasting a lot of $$$ forcing their kids to live someone else's dream because they can't be honest about how much talent their kid has.
Almost all kids who go to the next level in baseball today- high school, college, pros are playing select ball at an early age in a good program. Obviously only a few continue to advance to the higher levels but the chance and experience is once in a lifetime. Those who don't like it can always go play another sport or hobby. But they had the chance- they won't forget.

A handful of the current A&M baseball team players will be drafted this summer into the pros. One will probably be in the top 10 picks overall. He played select ball and developed into a great pitcher. You should ask Mr. Lacy if he wasted his money on select baseball.
There's a guy my son's age (10) who told me this past year during Little League season that he plans to take two years off during his son's junior and senior years in high school so he can travel to all of his son's baseball games and tournaments. He went on to tell me "your son's scholarship money will probably come from football, he should probably focus on that."

If I didn't halfway like the guy I would've laughed his ass off the field.
El Duke
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Neighborhood guys formed an 8U fall team this year and asked my son to be on it. Entered the BB USA Sunday Fall League. Our team had a lot of fun and won a majority of our games, we kind of had the "happy to be there attitude". Playing the Cypress and Katy teams with establish programs....wow what a difference. The parents looked miserable in the stands and the coaches were sometimes in full uniform and way too hardcore on the kids. It was a business approach for them.

As i started tracking results I realized on our off weekends at BB USA, those same teams were traveling all over the gulf coast to random tournaments. No thanks.



chico
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my son is now in college. We did the balance of local little league and select teams. The local little league made him feel like a star as he was one of the better players throughout. He made terrific friends that he's still close with and it's been a few years since they last played. He played little league until he was too old to continue. We were careful with the select teams so that we stayed only in Houston (home for us) on weekend tournaments. Select ball would be during the off-season from little league. Only had low stress coaches in select ball; I avoided opportunities to go with the more hard core route. He was plenty good enough in select ball, but rarely the best player on the team. They won a couple tournaments but lost plenty of games as well. No thoughts of ever getting scholarships or anything crazy like that. That combination of little league & carefully-chosen select fostered a real love of the game, lessons learned from sports that translate to real life, ongoing friendships, and many proud moments as his dad.
BohunkAg
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chico said:

my son is now in college. We did the balance of local little league and select teams. The local little league made him feel like a star as he was one of the better players throughout. He made terrific friends that he's still close with and it's been a few years since they last played. He played little league until he was too old to continue. We were careful with the select teams so that we stayed only in Houston (home for us) on weekend tournaments. Select ball would be during the off-season from little league. Only had low stress coaches in select ball; I avoided opportunities to go with the more hard core route. He was plenty good enough in select ball, but rarely the best player on the team. They won a couple tournaments but lost plenty of games as well. No thoughts of ever getting scholarships or anything crazy like that. That combination of little league & carefully-chosen select fostered a real love of the game, lessons learned from sports that translate to real life, ongoing friendships, and many proud moments as his dad.



Tbh that's probably the way to go.
jja79
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Does he know how little scholarship money there is in college baseball?
Ol_Ag_02
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jja79 said:

Does he know how little scholarship money there is in college baseball?


But Colton / Easton / Hunter is gonna get a scholarship to A&M and a top ten draft grade.
Fishing Fools
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My Dad was drafted as a pitcher by the Minnesota Twins organization out of high school at the age of 16. Pitched several years before being drafted by the US Army. I couldn't even make it at the high school level. I'm glad my parents didn't push me. Then again my dad could spot talent a mile away and I didn't have it. But then again, since I didn't have the genes, I may have been adopted.

https://share.icloud.com/photos/03EkZaqEtqMnKmp-3F9c3hvdg
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