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Keep it Fun!

Posted on Thursday, June 17th, 2010 at 3:52 pm

Hosting tournaments is a big part of what we do at Ripken Baseball, so I feel like I have a pretty good grasp on the topic. There are a lot of travel teams out there – travel, metro, tournament and all kinds of hybrids. But true travel teams should be made up of players who are committed to travelling and playing a more intense schedule.

Even with the popularity of travel teams, there’s still a presence for in-house or recreational leagues. My oldest boy is 10, and he decided to try baseball for the first time. Rec. ball was the right choice.

In playing the rec. season, he got some hits, threw some strikes, made a few plays and had an overall good time on the field. The team played just the right amount of games and practice time was kept to a minimum. For him and the other kids on the team, it was a good experience. Everyone had fun playing ball in a relaxed setting.

Then we went into the postseason and his rec. team suddenly picked up a travel team mentality. Umpire disputes. Tougher rules. Brackets. Anxieties. Two games in a day. None of those things should happen in a rec. season. That type of intense competition is reserved for the better teams or the ones a little more interested in the game.

A lot of kids join rec. programs because they simply don’t want the pressure that comes with a tournament or travel mentality. I’ve seen first-hand how a growing interest for the game can turn into no interest at all when the intensity-level gets ratcheted up too high.

There’s a big difference between wanting to do something and having to do something.

Rec. programs fall into the “wanting to do something” category, and that’s where they should stay. There will come a time when a kid decides he wants to get more serious about the game or realizes that his abilities need to be challenged at a higher level. And when that time comes, it should be the kid’s choice and no one else’s.

Simply tacking tournaments on to a rec. program does not work, and it threatens the interest of the young ballplayers that have chosen to play recreationally. When my son participated in that postseason rec. tournament, I sat in the stands and watched as interest waned.

During a pitching change on the field next to ours, I saw seven fielders sprawled out on the grass, and three baserunners sitting down on their bases. We’re not talking about taking a knee while the guy warms up, these kids literally laid flat on their backs. If that doesn’t scream, “We really don’t want to be here,” then I don’t know what does.

I’ve heard a lot of stories about the decline of rec. baseball because of tournament teams taking all the best players. Maybe some of that is true, and if so, so be it. But rec. programs are only going to hurt themselves if they try to duplicate tournament elements in their own seasons. To maintain and grow a rec. program, or what’s left of it, requires a little hard work and imagination to keep the kids we have interested in the game.

Let’s not bring the tournament atmosphere, and all the pressures that come with it, into the recreational setting. We need to bring rec. ball back to what it is supposed to be, FUN.

Filed in: Ripken Baseball, Tournaments, Youth Baseball.



 

3 Responses

  1. Rudy

    Great blog! When a kid is tired or no longer interested, you really hurt the fun factor for them by making them play beyond their interest level. I’ve pushed my son at times and regretted it. You really do have to listen to your kids.

  2. Shawn Halsey

    I have seen the lose of interest at Little League games too. I have also heard the statement about how travel teams are taking all the best players. I think if the coaches are willing to show the kids how to play baseball and how much fun it is no matter what the outcome is. I have seen kids hang tough thru some tough games and some kids that give up when the game isn’t going in their favor. I coach Little League and have had the honor to have one of my kids play in a tournament at the Ripken Academy in Aberdeen, MD. It was a real eye opener. It was a great experience for my son and my family.

  3. Shawn Halsey

    I totally agree about losing the kids’/ parents’ interest. I see it in Little League games too. I have seen kids hang tough thru some tough games and some kids that give up and quit when the games don’t go in their favor. I have heard the statement that travel teams are taking all the best players from the local rec./ Little leagues and that they can’t keep the players. If the coaches are willing to work and teach the kids the game of baseball and keep it interesting, then the leagues might be able to keep players. All the blame can’t be placed on the players or coaches, some of it falls on the parents too. I have had the honor to have one of my kids play in a tournament at the Ripken Academy in Aberdeen, MD. It was a real eye opener. Enough good things can not be said about the positive experience that we had at the tournament.

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  • About Ripken Baseball

    Ripken Baseball represents the endeavors of Cal Ripken, Jr. and his brother Bill Ripken since they retired from playing baseball professionally. The Baltimore-based company is on a mission to grow the game of baseball worldwide, the Ripken Way.

    Through various efforts, Ripken Baseball offers young players baseball experiences that they’ll never forget. The company currently operates two incredible youth baseball facilities – the Ripken Academy in Aberdeen, MD and the Ripken Experience in Myrtle Beach, SC – and owns three minor league ball clubs – the Aberdeen IronBirds, Augusta GreenJackets and Charlotte Stone Crabs.

    Both Cal and Bill are involved at all levels of Ripken Baseball, functioning in their executive roles while also getting down on the field and teaching young players the fundamentals during premium summer camps here in Maryland and around the country.

    The Ripken Baseball blog serves as a great resource to keep up with Cal, Bill and the team at Ripken Baseball as they grow the game of baseball worldwide by creating phenomenal experiences for today’s young players.

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