The little leagues in my area have between 100 and 300 kids participate every year. In just my city of Vancouver, WA there are 7 different leagues. So we are talking roughly 1400 kids in just the Vancouver city limits. If you expand that to our county (18 little leagues), you are talking approx. 3600 little leaguers. Who knows, that might even be low.
Age groups 5-12 is where the majority of these kids come from. This is a group where the youngest ones, especially the tee ballers, are playing because their parents either love the game themselves or are looking for something active for the little ones to do. I have three children and these are definitely factors in why our kids have played on baseball teams, basketball teams, soccer teams and taken gymnastics.
Now during that time, it becomes very apparent to the parents if their child enjoys it and has some skill or if it is just not the sport for them. So by the age of twelve, you will have seen those numbers dwindle compared to the numbers that were playing at the 5-9 age groups.
Little League recently added a new level which uses a mid sized field. So instead of jumping to 60’ from 46’ for pitchers, they can spend a couple years pitching from 50’. The base paths go to 70’ from 60’ instead of jumping right to 90’. In my opinion, the creation of this level was made by little league because there are other leagues/organizations out there that have been offering this for a while now. A big one that comes to mind is the Cal Ripkin Baseball league. I believe they started offering this in 2007. I don’t know when and who started this level and don’t know really anything about the rules of these leagues, but I do see the value in it. I remember it being tough making that jump from the little field to the big one. Something to keep in mind though, if you are trying to decide if your child should play at this level, every single player you see on TV right now went straight from the small field to the big field. There is a transition period but, honestly, it’s not a big deal. Let the child be humbled a little bit, it’s good for them.
Sorry, got a little off track there. So after kids graduate from the small field, you really see these numbers drop. So much to the point where some leagues struggle to even put together a 13U or 14U team. These days there is so much out there to choose from when a player turns 13. You’ve got LL, Babe Ruth and so many different organizations and independent teams to choose from. If you walk away from LL and go the org. or independent route, take the time and do your due diligence. There are some good ones out there and there are also some not so good ones. Ask around, especially about the coaches.
Once High School starts, only the best youth players survive. In our area, many of the schools don’t have Freshman/C teams any longer because of funding cuts. Now you are looking at only 30-40 kids making the teams at the schools that have only 2 teams to make. We have 7 high schools in Vancouver so you are talking maybe 400 (some of them do still have a freshman team) of the 1400 kids in Vancouver who played little league will end up playing baseball in high school.
High school to college. You might see anywhere from 1-5 kids from each HS varsity team go on to play some level of college ball. Again, you see the numbers dramatically drop here.
College to Professional Ball. You might see a handful of players that are seen as good enough to possibly contribute at the Major League level someday. The draft is a huge gamble for ML organizations. It’s almost like playing the lottery. You can have a team spend millions of dollars on all their draft picks one year and they might not ever see any of those kids make the big leagues.
Minor league ball to the big leagues. I would say you will see maybe 10% of players drafted will make the Major Leagues. Every SingleA team has 25 players so that means only 2-3 of those players will make it to the big leagues. The competition at that level is unreal.
Take a pitcher, in HS or College ball, the best one MIGHT get drafted. Once he does, he will find himself on a team with other pitchers as good as him or maybe even better. Sometimes this is hard for guys to handle. Their ego can get in the way and next thing you know they are gone. It’s unfortunate but that’s the reality of pro ball. Like I said, the competition is like no other.
After doing some research, I found there is approx. 3 million little leaguers in the US, so that means only .003% of little leaguers will even get to play in the major leagues! I knew it was low but didn’t realize it was that low.
There are many more tangibles to the game once a player goes pro but that is for another day. This is “The weeding out process”.