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Baby D

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Posts posted by Baby D

  1. My 6th grader is playing, the frosh made a team, but decided that volleyball is her sport of choice. :speechless:, although I have to say I'm impressed with her and "daddy's little girl" decided one year was enough for her. :facepalm: Oh well, It's their choice.

     

    Saw a couple tryouts (Bandits and Krushers) and have to say....very impressed with the amount of girls that came out for tryouts. Much work to do to get fastpitch to the level of soccer, volleyball, & basketball (the Communist girls sports:lol2:), but I think we are headin' in the right direction.

     

    Lawnboy - it's actually:

     

    Soccer = Communism

    Volleyball = Socialism

    Softball/Baseball = American

    Basketball = Kentucky

     

    Or at least that's what I tell my girls!!! :sarcastic:

  2. Most expensive private school in NKY yet the lowest coaches salary in NKY. Seems a little odd to me. What gives?

     

    Also was told at one time that they only accept 50 kids per class. Is this true?

     

    Tuition $$$ go almost to academics and extracurriculars...Athletic fees and money raised by the boosters is nominal compared to other schools. Never heard there was a cap at 50 students per grade??

  3. I thought the turning point was when Dixie had taken a 3-2 lead in the top of the 4th, between innings Max sent a set of battery mates to the bullpen. As the Dixie starting pitching stood behind the mound after the throw to second, he watched them and followed them all the way down the 3rd base line. Right there, his entire body language took over and he looked to the dugout and hung his head. Seem to lose any confidence he had and his first pitch fastball got drilled to RC. Thought he pitched a good game, not much help defensively.

  4. No doubt Krohman got squeezed on the corners with Bleser - two Rebels were rung up on the same pitchers in the top of the 1st. I think the turning point in the game was in Boone's first when they could not get the bunt down and then struck out looking in the 2 and 3 hole. Scoring in the first may have made some difference in confidence, etc... as the game went along. I will say that Krohman was impressive vs. a very tough lineup, but Boone undoubtedly outhit the Colonels tonight. Defense was the difference, lots of "at tem" balls for Boone tonight.

  5. How about before the CCH/Boone game when the grounds crew chief (who by the way do a heck of a job with that field) announced to everyone before the National Anthem that HE would let the umps and teams know when they could take the field. A little overdramatic, and a lot of extra time, for a game that already started an hour late. Kudos to Clint Brown, owner of the Freedom, for personally being there, allowing the 9th region to using the field, and hanging out with the normal folks.

  6. I know its a blind draw, but Ludlow seems to have the worst luck in these blind draws. In 2004 when they made the region, after they beat the #1 team in the region CovCath in the first round of the district and ended up winning the district championship. They got rewarded by getting to play the #3 team in the region in Dixie in the first round. Then if they won that they would have got to play the #4 team in the region in Conner, then it would have been the #2 team in the region in Beechwood in the finals. I know it is a blind draw, but you never see any of the top teams usually get that tough of draws,and I bet somehow CovCath wouldn't have had that tough draw if they could have won the region. Ludlow must just have terrible luck, because now this year they get to play the #1 team in the region in the first round! My friend at Ludlow need to carry a lucky rabbits foot or something to these blind draws for now on...:D

     

    You have to beat the best sometime...might as well get to it. If you do get by the top seeds early, the pitching tends to get watered down a little bit, unless you are like Ryle and CCH that have a very deep pitching staff.

  7. Frankly, with a blind draw, all teams stand an even chance at the beginning of the draw. In no other method can you say that. Bias, opinion, exposure, all take away form the credibility of the subjective seeding process. In your statements alone, you concede that you feel the bigger schools are usually better and thusly your bias alone would color your ability to subjectively seed teams. By taking away those sentiments and drawing blindly, you at least start out even for every team.

     

    Actually Lloyd has been traditionally a very strong baseball program over the past 30 to 40 years. Villa has produced a number of good teams over the years including a pretty fair squad last year. And, need I remind anyone of Ludlow's stunner over CovCath a couple years ago that knocked the Blue Colonels out of the Regional all together? In my mind, all seeding does is provide traditional powers an un-needed leg up on schools trying to build or compete with fewer students or lesser facilities. Solve the problem and classify the sport.

     

    Bulldog, you are correct. What happens at tournament time, whether blind draw or seeding, is that you are at the mercy of the strong pitching staffs. You have to beat the best sometime. Villa was stuck in a 5 team district for 10 years (Holy Cross, CovCath, Beechwood and Dixie), then during the last realignment was another 5 team district (Dixie, Scott, Lloyd, and Beechwood). Given the potential pitcher or two that can come from the smaller schools like Beechwood, Ludlow, Lloyd, or even Villa, the 4 team district finally allows them to miss the potential play-in game. I know Lloyd has made some runs the last couple of years, especially with Drifmeyer. Bellevue had good success with Lenny Bays and Gullett several years ago. I would take any of the Ludlow pitchers the last 5 years on my staff anytime. Beechwood speaks for itself. And honestly, going back the last several years, according to the KHSAA website, Villa won the 34th district last year, lost to Scott 2-1 in 2005, to Lloyd 9-4 in 2004, and to Scott 6-5 in 2003. You are only as good as the next pitcher you face.

  8. Consistent - the strike zone has to be consistent for both teams throughout the game. However, for pitchers its all about location, location, location. Teaching pitchers to adjust to the umpire and his strike zone (who/which changes every game) creates bad habits. Pitchers should be taught to hit the corners and knees, pitch inside and change speeds. These fundamentals are more important than adjusting to what the umpire thinks the strike zone should be that day. Unfortunately, some umpires, specifically those who come down from doing college and travel ball where there is more talent and have higher expectations, take control of the game. If the umpire remains consistent and transparent behind the plate, they have had a good day.

  9. Harrison County has played 7th and 8th graders before with great success. I have coached 8th graders that were better than most upperclassmen in our school, or some in the conference. Small schools that need to fill a void should not be a problem. If the school is relying solely on grade school players for varsity, then perhaps the coach should evaluate a JV season for a year or two. As far as NKY, I have not seen a situation where a varsity was predominantly grade school. If they are good enough, let them play.:ylsuper:

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