Sunday, July 26, 2015

Youth Baseball: Sending all the wrong messages?

Youth Baseball: Sending all the wrong messages?
By: Will Lowrey

               As a kid, I remember the excitement of putting my one color blue t-shirt on with white lettering sponsored by the local soda company.  I remember my matching blue button in the back mesh “trucker” hat.  The field was a sandlot made with a broken chain-link fence surrounding with many holes in it.  The backstop was made from telephone poles with fencing put together.  We would play one or two games on Saturday and right after my dad and I would rush to a pond bank to get a little fishing in.  The next day, it was time for church and family.  We always took a step back and ate at the dinner table, while I told my grandparents how I had played the day before.  I think about our kids now and wonder which memories will stand out to them.  I imagine it will be similar in remembering times with family and friends rather than the thousands of games they played and the endless amount of trophies they received.  Youth baseball has transitioned into a generation of parents pushing for development and growth, while we are losing the ability for kids to be kids (Smith, 2014).
               The problem with youth baseball is what society has labeled as a “must-do” to get prepared for high school.  In the past ten years, we have seen Multi-Million dollar youth baseball complexes built in almost every community throughout the state.  The United States Specialty Sports Association (USSSA) started a business model that involved tournament ball for youth sports.  The structure offers parents and kids the ability to come to one sports complex on a weekend and the opportunity to play as many as four to six games.  Each weekend offers the opportunity to be the best.  Within that sports complex, it is not uncommon for as many as fifty to one hundred teams to be present on the many different fields appropriate for each age level. The allure of bringing that much economic development into communities was too much to pass on for government ran park and recreation departments. In the beginning, many parents resisted the temptation to get into this “travel world”, which would take such a huge financial and time commitment to be on a team (Riddle, 2014).  Over time, the feeling of getting left behind has made a huge majority leave the recreational world behind to suffer.
               Not only are travel teams competing on the field, they are competing to have the nicest jerseys, the loudest music, the best coach, etc.  Coaches are being paid as much as $5,000-$10,000 a year to coach all ages of youth teams.  The structure has this generation completely hooked…..hooked, line, and sinker.  You have the ability to play at different levels depending on how advanced your team is. Everyone is fighting to improve and recruit the best so they can call themselves a “Major Team”.  You can easily qualify in any number of World Series opportunities offered.  If you pay enough, you can even go to Disney World to play. 
               It has become so cut-throat that we are seeing teams that are competing at high levels and experiencing great success with their teams only to cut the weakest team members after the season to pick up better players.  There is no consideration into spending time with those kids to develop them and catch them up with the rest of the team. That would take too much time.  This happens in every age group.  Our parents and coaches make it okay, because they won’t be able to achieve that next level with those same kids so a business decision has to be made.  Make no bones about it, it is a business decision.  But don’t worry, those parents and kids pick up the pieces and jump right into the cyclical world with another high level program and go at it all over again.
               I have seen the competitive nature of our parents, not our kids, come out over the past ten years.  The parents that come into this world saying they aren’t sure they have the money or time to commit to these programs, are the very ones that are pushing to play additional games and travel to the best tournaments.  The immediate results of that trophy every weekend and winning is too much of an opportunity, or an appeal on our egos to walk away from.  Teams that commit to playing 4-6 per year eventually give into the pressure and play as many as sixty to one hundred games from Spring to Summer. A quick check on the USSSA website gave me the ability to sign up for over 250 tournaments from January 1 to December 31 in the state of Mississippi alone (USSSA.com, 2015).
               There is nothing wrong with creating opportunities for our youth to participate and to achieve high levels of greatness, but at what cost?  When will enough be enough?  There are problems arising from this dilemma. Kids, and I do mean kids, are making the decision not to continue playing, because they are picking up on how much it cost to play and the burden that it is putting on their families. There are families that have spent as much as $15,000-$20,000 dollars in one year to participate in hopes of a college scholarship (Riddle, 2014). Kids are playing all the way up to college and then quitting. 
There is no more balance in what kids can normally have the opportunities to do, because of the pressure they feel to keep up with their “competition”. There is no more emphasis on fun, but all about winning.  Kids are feeling like Youth Baseball has become a job (Wixon, 2014).  In contrast to their intentions, they are hurting their chances to be successful at the next level due to wear and tear on their shoulders and elbows.  These young bodies are not built to play this many games (Snyder, 2014).  It is very important to follow the guidelines that are available by the American Sports Medicine Institute regarding pitch counts and, on the whole, this is not being done (Campbell, 2015). 

Mark Hyman, author of Until It Hurts and sports management teacher at George Washington University, offers this insight when speaking of youth sports: “I think youth sports are an incredibly important part of a kids’ experience growing up.  There are so many valuable lessons to be learned there.  I want to do everything I can to encourage kids to play sports, but what I’m suggesting is that the system that is set up now is doing just the opposite.” (Smith, 2014).   There are many that will debate this view, because parents see everyone following this trend.  There are limits on pitching provided by the USSSA organization and many of the players rotate in pitching, so they see this as safe.
As many as ten players on a twelve man roster can pitch and offer relief to the players from abusing their arm.  The limits that are followed by the USSSA in tournaments are presented as what is needed to protect a young athletes’ arm.   There are also rules in place to keep players from pitching on back-to-back days and there are limits to how many innings they can pitch in a given tournament.  The only problem with this is there are no rules telling teams how many pitches a kid can throw in any term outside of that weekend.  The amount of games that teams are playing in the span of one year has become the problem.  You can play as many as 60 games in three months if you play every weekend.  Many are playing for 5-6 months out of the year or more, which allows for well over one hundred games.  In a 2002 study by the American Sports Medicine Institute, they suggest that an 11-12 year old athlete should not pitch more than 1,000 pitches in a season (Campbell, 2015).   Most top level pitchers will pitch twice in a weekend and throw a minimum of 75 pitches.  If a team plays 12 tournaments, that would equal 1,800 pitches, which can easily be played in 4-5 months. 
To add to this problem, the pitcher is not truly getting rest when he is not pitching.  Travel teams are not usually made up of more than twelve players on a roster, which means that pitcher is using his arm at another position all weekend and all season.  Keep in mind that the high level pitchers on a team may pitch two games per weekend, which would usually make up forty to fifty percent of the games played.  You do the math:  If a team plays 60 games per year, that high level pitcher would have the opportunity to pitch in a part of or all of 24-30 games per year.  That is simply not acceptable.  We are starting to see the negative results now of the past decades’ trend. 
It is time for parameters to be set on youth baseball and for our parents to see what our society is doing to our kids.  Enough is enough as it is also time to give our kids the opportunity to be a kid, while still giving them every opportunity to be prepared for the next level, without sacrificing our pocket books and our quality time with our families and experiences in other areas of our lives.  We need an opportunity to sit back down at the dinner table and play in the backyard.
Playing in six tournaments per year would mean six weekends from March to July.  There are twenty weekends in that time frame.  That would give ample opportunity for families to not over-extend themselves financially.  That would also equal about 24-30 games per season, and there is nothing wrong with staying local on five out of the six tournaments to save on travel expenses.  By adjusting to this structure, that is more than enough to develop a young athlete when you add practice time.  That might even allow for lower income families to participate.  This is greatly needed.   The current structure eliminates those that do not have the funds to be a part of something that could be great for everyone.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with splitting your travel team up and having everyone participate in your local recreational league during the week to wear that one color t-shirt and hat and make new friends and have FUN!  Youth sports should be about development and growth, not trophies (Pfeiffer, 2015).  Even though we have the best of everything with youth baseball facilities, jerseys, and opportunities in travel baseball, your kid will always remember the moments that were surrounded with acceptance, love, and fun more than any championship.  If you want to see what I’m talking about, let your kid call his friends and let them go play a game with no rules set by an adult.  The structured and organized games ran by adults are taking the kid out of your kid.

 (For the record:  I didn't start playing baseball until the 8th grade, 
and still received a college scholarship in baseball)  

References

1 Campbell, J.D. (2015). “Arm injuries a concern regarding youth baseball, too.” IU News room.  http://newsinfo.iu.edu/web/page/normal/10839.html.

2 Pfieffer, Alex (2015). “HBO’s Real Sports looks into America’s Trophy Culture”.
http://dailycaller.com/2015/07/20/hbos-real-sports-looks-into-americas-trophy-culture/

3 Riddle, Greg (2014). “Club Sports offer Exposure-but at a Steep Price”. Dallas Morning News.

4 Smith, Corbett (2014). “Time and Money: Parents Placing Kids in Specialized Sports do so at a Price”. Dallas Morning News.

5 Snyder, Matt (2014). “Dr. Andrews: Year-round baseball at young age is top TJ risk factor”.  CBSSports.com.

6 USSSA.com (2015). United States Specialty Sports Association. 

7 Wixon, Matt (2014). “Intensity of Specialization can lead to burnout: Club Sports bring increased competition, regimentation”. Dallas Morning News.