Keep in mind it's not so much what drills are being done, it's the number of repetitions in those drills, and the fine tuning of things that the coaches point out. Anybody can hit fungo but it's not just taking grounders or fly balls, it's coaching the footwork on a grounder, how to work a backhand, how to turn and run to a fly ball, and take an angle. Little things such as positioning your feet before the pitch or how to work through the ball to play a hop. That's where the coaching experience comes in.
Now, I'm not advocating one way or another for paid vs. volunteer vs. dads, just that what looks superficially the same in doing drills really isn't.
My oldest has had good dudes as his coaches and all of them knew baseball. They played juco or college ball and some played minor league ball but the coaches for his current team are the ones he's connected the best with and made the most improvement. He has 3 coaches but one is more of the team administrator- he doesn't do much instruction but he's the guy hitting fungo while the other two are watching and instructing (he's the only one who didn't play in college). His coaches are tough but instructional- if you do it right, you're encouraged. If you do it wrong they tell you exactly what you did wrong and how to fix it while demonstrating it. You do it wrong too many times and they'll jump your butt.
There's good & bad to independent teams just like larger organizations. Just have to do your homework and I'd recommend trying out multiple places. But be up front and let the coaches/organizations know you're trying to find a good fit for your kid.
Now, I'm not advocating one way or another for paid vs. volunteer vs. dads, just that what looks superficially the same in doing drills really isn't.
My oldest has had good dudes as his coaches and all of them knew baseball. They played juco or college ball and some played minor league ball but the coaches for his current team are the ones he's connected the best with and made the most improvement. He has 3 coaches but one is more of the team administrator- he doesn't do much instruction but he's the guy hitting fungo while the other two are watching and instructing (he's the only one who didn't play in college). His coaches are tough but instructional- if you do it right, you're encouraged. If you do it wrong they tell you exactly what you did wrong and how to fix it while demonstrating it. You do it wrong too many times and they'll jump your butt.
There's good & bad to independent teams just like larger organizations. Just have to do your homework and I'd recommend trying out multiple places. But be up front and let the coaches/organizations know you're trying to find a good fit for your kid.