Your First Year in Select Baseball: What No One Tells You
So youâve finally taken the leap from rec ball to select. First of all, congratsâand welcome to the chaos. You’re officially a Baseball Parent now. Your weekends will never be the same, your trunk is about to become a mobile locker room, and your kid is going to learn more about teamwork, pressure, and dirt than they ever did in a classroom.
While coaches and team websites will tell you about schedules and fees, thereâs a whole other side to select baseball no one really prepares you for. Weâre here to give you the real scoopâfrom gear costs to sideline politics.
Hereâs everything no one tells you before your first year in North Texas Select Baseball.
1. âž Itâs Not Just BaseballâItâs a Lifestyle Now
You thought you were signing up for a âcompetitive team.â What you really signed up for is a second full-time job.
Youâll spend your Friday nights packing coolers and your Saturdays hopping from ballpark to hotel lobby to Whataburger drive-thru. Sundays? Youâll be checking bracket schedules like itâs March Madness.
Pro Tip: Tournament schedules can change last minute. Download GameChanger and get used to living by your phone.
2. đą The Team Group Chat Will Rule Your Life
If youâre not already in 47 group texts, congrats! You will be soon.
Expect game time changes, uniform assignments, snack signups, and those 10pm âIs anyone else bringing Gatorade?â messages. Itâs chaoticâbut necessary.
What they donât tell you: Silence your notifications at your own risk. Miss one message and youâll show up to the game in the wrong jersey at the wrong field with the wrong snacks.
3. đ¸ Yes, Itâs That Expensiveâand Then Some
Youâve probably budgeted for team dues, uniforms, and travel. But letâs break down whatâs actually coming:
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Bat: $300â$500
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Glove: $150â$300
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Cleats: $60â$150 (and theyâll outgrow them mid-season)
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Bag: $80+
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Helmet: $60â$100
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Practice gear, warm-ups, and team swag: $$â
And then thereâs tournament travel, meals, hotels, hitting lessons, and cage time. Oh, and gate fees. Yes, youâll be paying to watch your own child play.
Check out our favorite baseball gear guides.
4. đ§ Coaches Are Different in Selectâand So Are the Expectations
In rec ball, it was all about fun. In select, coaches are developing players for the long haul. That means tough love, feedback on mechanics, and not always batting every kid every game.
It can be hard watching your kid ride the bench or get moved in the lineupâbut remember, itâs part of the process.
What no one tells you: The best coaches aren’t the ones who coddleâtheyâre the ones who teach your kid how to handle failure and success.
5. đ Your Kid Will Be TestedâAnd So Will You
Theyâll cry in the car. You might, too.
There will be days your kid feels unstoppable⌠and days they strike out three times and want to quit. Select baseball builds resilience, but itâs not always pretty getting there.
Your job? Be their rock, not their coach. Let the dugout handle the baseball. You handle the hugs, the hydration, and the after-game heart-to-hearts.
6. đ “Daddy Ball” Is a ThingâBut Itâs Not Always Bad
Ah, the age-old drama: Why is the coachâs kid always pitching or playing shortstop?
Sometimes itâs favoritism. Other times, the coachâs kid is just really freaking good. You’ll learn quickly how to spot the differenceâand how to politely keep your opinions to yourself unless it actually affects your kidâs experience.
7. đ Your Car Will Become a Locker Room on Wheels
Hope you didnât love that new car smell.
Between dirty cleats, wet socks, and mystery seed shells, your backseat will soon be a mobile clubhouse. Get a big gear bag, stash Febreze everywhere, and invest in a trunk organizer yesterday.
8. đ Tournaments Are Long. Really Long.
A typical Saturday looks like:
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Game 1 at 8:00am
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Game 2 at 2:45pm
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Pool play ends
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Bracket play starts (Sunday morning)
- Game 1 at 8:00am (if you lost both games)
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Championship game under the lights at 9pm
And thatâs if thereâs no rain delay, lightning, or coin toss shenanigans.
What they donât tell you: Bring chairs, fans, shade tents, and maybe a Crockpot. Veteran parents have this down to a science.
9. đ§ Snack Bars, Sunscreen & Sanity: Your New Holy Trinity
Youâll forget your wallet, your hat, and your chargerâbut never the snacks. A well-fed kid is a happy player.
Also: North Texas sun hits different. Stock up on SPF, cooling towels, and game day chairs with cup holders that actually work.
- SNACK. SPIN. REPEAT - Make snacking a breeze with 5 snacking compartments with interactive button. Combine your snack bowls and cups into one light-weight, easy to use container!
- PORTION PERFECT - Each compartment holds 1/4 cups of solid food. Use to increase variety, make balanced eating fun, and entice children to try new foods in a fun, no pressure way.
- SAFE & EASY TO CLEAN - All materials are BPA and PVC Free for a worry free feeding solution. Made from durable polypropylene. Top rack dishwasher safe.
- ON THE GO EASE - Stress free, portable, and convenient size make this divided snack container the best for on the go. Transparent, airtight, and leakproof lid reduces messes and contains solid food.
- MORE THAN A SNACK CONTAINER - Snack spinner is 6.5 inches in diameter making it perfect for toddler size portions. Interactive button keeps kids engaged and assists with fine and gross motor skills as they choose snacks independently.
10. đ§ââď¸ You’ll Gain a Baseball FamilyâBut You Might Lose a Friend or Two
Baseball parents bond fast. Youâre spending weekends together, sharing Gatorades, victories, and vent sessions. But sometimes… people clash. And thatâs okay.
Your baseball circle will evolve, and not everyone makes it to next season. Choose positivity, avoid drama, and always cheer loudâno matter whose kid is up to bat.
11. â¤ď¸ You’ll See Your Kid GrowâFast
Not just in skills. In maturity. In grit. In emotional intelligence. Baseball is a game of failure and comeback storiesâand your kid is living one every weekend.
By seasonâs end, youâll notice how theyâve changed: more confident, more focused, more resilient. And youâll know it was all worth it.
12. đ One Day, Youâll Miss All of This
The early mornings. The ugly hotel carpet. The walk-off hits. The car ride breakdowns. All of it.
Because eventually, the cleats will get smaller. The tournaments will slow down. And that dugout door will close behind them for the last time.
Take the pictures. Cheer too loud. Pack the snacks. Be there.
âž Final Thoughts
Your first year in select baseball will test your patience, your budget, your GPS, and sometimes your sanity. But itâll also give you a front-row seat to your child becoming something pretty amazing.
No one tells you how fast it all goes. But now you know.
So breathe deep. Bring shade. And welcome to the family.