TAMU1990 said:
TarponChaser said:
Sean98 said:
Can I ask a related/unrelated question? And to be clear, I'm excited for this commitment but it brings something up that I've been wondering about... particularly as it relates to projectability.
This kid will be 19.25 years old when he steps on campus. Do parents intentionally start their kids late in school these days? Do they hold them back at some point? I was 17 when I walked on the A&M campus. I looked at his pitching stats and thought "he's a junior to be so he'll add 3-5mph" and he may. But he's almost the same age I was when I graduated HS.
And this isn't a JD thing, it happens a lot it seems these days. Just curious.
It happens a lot. I even know a bunch of kids whose parents have taken them out of school to repeat 8th grade via homeschool and reclassify them. And not just summer birthdays either but kids born in the middle of the school year like in January.
There's a lot of disagreement over whether or not it's a good move.
I've seen that but that can be a problem in baseball. When my kids played played youth ball was grouped from May 1 - April 30. If you are held back and born April 30th or earlier you have to play up from your grade anyway. It also creates a problem your 8th grade year when you are 15 and the rest of your team are freshman in HS while you are in 8th grade.
Braden Montgomery was born in April and he was young in his grade. It didn't matter for him. There are many reasons parents hold kids back - academics, maturity, and sports are the usual reasons.
There may be other governing bodies in youth baseball that I'm not aware of but all of the big ones EXCEPT Little League Baseball have April 30 age cut-off dates. Those are Perfect Game, USSSA, V-Tool, NCS, and Pony League. Little League Baseball has an August 31st cut-off date.
I don't know about other sanctioning bodies but Perfect Game has grade-level exceptions (last I saw it was limited to 2 per team) where a kid can be too old for an age group by birthday but maybe they were held back a year so they can play with a younger age group. The caveat is they then have a 12/31 date cut-off. For example, I know a kid on the #2 rated 13U team in the country, Elite RBI National (they're starting their 14U season) who will be 15 in January but he was held back and is just starting 8th grade. So he'll be 19 when he graduates HS. When you take a look at the Perfect Game rosters for all these nationally & regionally ranked teams at 14U and below you'll see they're stocked with kids who have been held back or even playing down in age thanks to grade-level exceptions and so they're physically more mature than a ton of kids they're facing.
Below HS age gets pretty wild and even some HS kids who are 14U by age but are freshmen in HS will play 14U instead of 15U like most of their graduating class.
Both of my boys have summer birthdays and we didn't hold them back so they will both be 17 when they graduate HS. For example, our HS freshman just turned 14 about 3 weeks ago and our 5th grader won't be 10 for 2 more weeks. So they're eligible by age to play 14U and 10U respectively but we have them playing with their graduating class- our 14-year old skipped from 10U over 11U to play 12U a couple years ago and our younger one skipped from 8U to 10U this past year and is now playing 11U. There have been and will be some growing pains for both but it's definitely for the best.