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Thread: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

  1. Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by CajunNation View Post
    Robe is 1000% correct about his disdain for Travel Ball.

    It does not teach fundamentals.

    I also believe it helps destroy communities.

    Lots of adults living through their children. Lots of other adults selling lies and cashing checks. Lots of ruined arms and bad attitudes.
    While much of this may be an accurate recitation of the facts and while Robe has continually stated as such, I have yet to hear Robe or anyone else provide an alternate solution to the development of players outside of travel ball.

  2. Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by MetryCajun View Post
    I do remember a World Series bunt that was pretty exciting.
    Which is in part why "discover" is not the right word for the headline.

  3. #15

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by CajunVic View Post
    While much of this may be an accurate recitation of the facts and while Robe has continually stated as such, I have yet to hear Robe or anyone else provide an alternate solution to the development of players outside of travel ball.
    If you listen to him talk about it, it’s not the actual playing that he doesn’t care for. He’s fine with them playing, it’s the model of how it’s played with them not teaching them to compete and everyone getting a chance to play without earning something.

  4. #16

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by BeauCajun View Post
    Not a bad article by Bobby Ardoin. Talking about the lack of bunting fundamentals in travel ball.
    I ain't driving to a different tourney every other week, stay in crummy motels and eating fast food to watch 14 year olds sac bunt. It only matters if the six recruits a years that come need to acquire bunting skills.

  5. #17

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by lifetimecajun View Post
    If you listen to him talk about it, it's not the actual playing that he doesn't care for. He's fine with them playing, it's the model of how it's played with them not teaching them to compete and everyone getting a chance to play without earning something.
    My kid played travel ball for seven years. Nobody ever offered him anything, except a chance to play with and against the best players in Florida. I never watched a travel ball game where each team was not trying to win. Sure, they subbed pitchers every 2 or 3 innings. So what? The main objective was to be seen by college coaches and MLB scouts, in a competitive environment.

    Every little league player got a trophy for showing up. No cuts. My kid threw them all in the trash.

    To paint travel ball, or anything else with a broad brush is not smart. I saw ten times as many arms abused in high school as I ever saw in travel ball, scout teams whatever you want to call it.

  6. Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by Dad04 View Post
    I ain't driving to a different tourney every other week, stay in crummy motels and eating fast food to watch 14 year olds sac bunt. It only matters if the six recruits a years that come need to acquire bunting skills.
    The sport of baseball would have died before Babe Ruth if people were forced to watch bunting as the main scoring option.

    jmo

  7. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dad04 View Post
    My kid played travel ball for seven years. Nobody ever offered him anything, except a chance to play with and against the best players in Florida. I never watched a travel ball game where each team was not trying to win. Sure, they subbed pitchers every 2 or 3 innings. So what? The main objective was to be seen by college coaches and MLB scouts, in a competitive environment.

    To paint travel ball, or anything else with a broad brush is not smart. I saw ten times as many arms abused in high school as I ever saw in travel ball, scout teams whatever you want to call it.
    Your last sentence is spot on.

  8. #20

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by Turbine View Post
    The sport of baseball would have died before Babe Ruth if people were forced to watch bunting as the main scoring option.

    jmo
    Nobody ever got a scholarship, or drafted because they were a really, really good bunter.

    Other than the double suicide twice a month, this small ball puts a lot of people to sleep. I love a good pitchers duel, but if we pitch we win. If we don't we won't, except for last Friday when we finally stepped on somebody's neck hard.

  9. #21

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by MetryCajun View Post
    Your last sentence is spot on.
    Maybe because we watched scout teams with 15 pitchers, all either going D1, or pro ball. There are tons of excellent, well-run travel programs.

    Everybody is a free agent and water seeks it's own level. The best end up on the best teams, playing the other best teams. Every good team had tryouts, usually run by MLB scouts. If you can't play you got weeded out.

    I don't really know what goes on at the bottom of the pile. We were never there. I'm sure like everything else, the bottom 10% of travel ball teams are a real ____ show.

  10. #22

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt


  11. #23

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Quote Originally Posted by Dad04 View Post
    "Declining participation, rising costs and unqualified coaches"

    This is not a result of nebulous, societal changes. This is a direct result of travel/elite ball.

    Travel ball exploded in a period of overall decline in athletic participation of 6-12 y/o. Travel ball fills a need for the better players. To blame travel ball for the overall decline in athletic participation of 6-12 years olds is short sighted and agenda driven.

    More latch key kids than ever, not allowed outside after school, all getting carpal tunnel syndrome from video games. That is the culprit.
    It's a self-fulfilling prophecy.

    Fewer kids for local, youth leagues, fewer resources for said leagues, curious parents see poor conditions, take their kids to travel ball, one less kid for local league, cycle repeat.

    Also, video games have been around for 40 years. What has changed is what the parents value and how they raise their own kids.

    They could just put the game down and go join their local youth league, well, maybe not. They disbanded a few years ago.

  12. #24

    Default Re: Cajuns discover the power of the bunt

    Travel or "select" baseball is all well and good for kids that are in high school, as long as there are responsible coaches in charge. But it's gotten to the point where its basically mandatory for any player that has aspirations to play any further than low level high school ball.

    But it absolutely is killing the sport in the youth age groups. I have friends that are spending their entire weekends traveling all over the state, and paying thousands of dollars for their SIX year old sons to play baseball! That's ridiculous.

    And now, if you aren't on one of these teams, or cant afford it, or are just starting to play the game, and haven't developed into a good enough player for it...you either don't play, or are stuck playing in leagues that are on the brink of dissolution. And being coached by dads who don't know the first thing about baseball.

    Kids are giving up the game at 7, 8, 9 years old because they aren't good enough for the "select" team. I know from personal experience that a lot of these kids that are so good at that age end up being nothing as high school players. I also know kids who didn't even pick up a baseball until they were 11 or 12 that ended up playing professionally.

    Another issue I have with it in the younger age groups (and actually this pertains to the older ones as well)...I coach multiple sports, and have sons that are in middle school. It's appalling to me how many of these kids, and 99% of the ones I'm referring to are the "select" baseball players, are already giving up all of the other sports to "concentrate" on baseball because they have it in their heads that they are great because their parents were willing to pay for them to be on a "select" baseball team. I think that is THE WORST thing that middle school kids can do. They need to be playing as many different sports as they can at that age, and if they are excelling at the high school level after they're sophomores in a single sport, then ok, spend your time with it. But doing that in 7th or 8th grade is doing themselves a huge disservice...in my opinion.


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