Select baseball for 9u-18u players in San Antonio, TX and it’s surrounded areas. Member of Texas Premier Baseball. Powered by @P15Sports and @ftrstarsseries .
Lobos Baseball Spring/Summer Youth tryouts are just around the corner. Make sure you register prior to tryouts utilizing the registration link below:
https://t.co/ZdW9kqPEEC
@NorCalU1@butchbaccala It is no longer about the product and quality of teams on the field. I remember the days of having to submit a team’s verifiable resume to get into tournaments. Now, if you can pay, you can get in.
Good teams/programs want to play other good teams/programs.
Lyndon Austin (OF Uncommitted Boerne Champion 2028) made the jump varsity baseball in his sophomore year. He played in 41 of 43 games, for a team that made it to the state semifinals.
101 PA, 76 AB, .827 OPS, 24 H, 2 3B, 30 R, 20 RBI, 19 BB, 6 K, HBP, 5 SAC, 16 SB, 2 CS
This week, we go Behind The Scenes with @IC_PioneerBsb senior pitcher @Landon_Brown_6, a @HailStateBB commit who could hear his name called in this year's MLB Draft.
Watch the full story on Saturday at 11 p.m. on KHOU/CBS 11 and on all social platforms on Tuesday.
Presented by @ChevyHouston
🚨Energy drinks and youth athletes🚨
Children, teens, and young athletes avoid energy drinks, citing potential health risks and the lack of performance benefits.
Caffeine Overload
-Many energy drinks contain high levels of caffeine (often 200-300+ mg per can)
-Increase heart rate and blood pressure
-Cause jitteriness, anxiety, or poor sleep
-Hurt focus and recovery
**Using an energy drink for fuel is like rearranging furniture on a sinking ship
No Substitution for Nutrition
No energy drink can replace proper fueling, hydration, or sleep. Athletes need real food, hydration, and balanced meals to perform and recover optimally.
Hidden Ingredients
Energy drinks often contain herbal stimulants (like guarana, yohimbine, or ginseng), sugar alcohols, and other ingredients that cause GI distress.
Better Alternatives
-Water + electrolytes
-Coconut H20 or cherry juice for fuel
-Chocolate milk post-workout
-Coffee in moderation (for older athletes)
-Carbohydrate-rich snacks for energy
Fuel with food first. Energy drinks are a shortcut with a cost—especially for developing athletes.
https://t.co/EPWoswdeHe
South Texas Prospect Showcase 2 weeks away! Pro-Style workout with College Coaches and Pro Scouts in attendance. Open to HS players, JC guys and Transfers. Scan QR code to register.
@RodBriggs3 Summer is a great time to prioritize:
-Rest
-Recovery
-Smart training
-Proper nutrition *muscle gain which many of my athletes are focused on now!
If you're smart you can dial in your nutrition and rest and add 10 lbs of muscle and be a total monster this fall if done properly!
Aaron Barry, Jr. (RHP/1B Brennan 2030) has another solid outing on the bump. Kid is a competitor and give his team a chance to win every time he goes the rubber.
@Brennan_Bsb@ftrstarsseries@2SeamBSBClub
⚾️ The Final Baseball Post...
My hope is that this post helps young Baseball players and their families figure it out and fulfill and reach their Baseball goals and dreams.
If you want to be good and you want to be the best you have to put in the work. There is absolutely no substitute for this.
Mindset matters. A gritty no nonsense attitude is what it takes.
Start early. Strength training is a must. Practice, practice, practice.
Be a student of the game. Have a high baseball IQ.
Except the ups and downs and the highs and lows. Except setbacks. It's all part of it.
Listen to feedback and use it. Ask for the Truth always and use it to get better.
Don't be soft. Be tough minded and soft hearted.
Humility matters. It's a must. Be confident not cocky.
Be a great teammate and help others. There's no "I" in team. Look out for your teammates and always have their backs.
Listen to your coaches and work with them to get better so that you can help them put a more competitive team on the field.
You must be a fierce competitor at all times. No excuses.
Baseball is a beautiful game. You are never bigger than the game. It will humble you if it hasn't already.
Learn and understand this early. It's not about showcases and fluff. It's about being really, really good and being able to produce consistent results especially when it counts.
You may be a social media superstar but the question is are you a superstar on the field at your position.
The grass is not always greener somewhere else. This is a myth. Plant roots and get to work. Earn it and get better. Loyalty matters. It matters a lot. The transfer portal is a tool but most certainly is not always the answer, solution or the right option or choice to take.
The only limitation on yourself is the one you put on yourself.
In summary it's all about really hard work, being humble, tough minded, all about the Truth, loyalty, team before self and doing what it takes and what it requires to be great. No shortcuts.
Lastly, you cannot do it alone. If you have a God given gift to play the game of Baseball remember who gave you that gift and put the One who gave you that gift along with so many other blessings first in your life. Put the Lord Jesus Christ first always, live for Jesus and share Jesus with others. If you fail to do this nothing else matters. It's just this simple. Jesus must always come first no matter what. Also, thank and appreciate your family, friends and those who support you. Love and thank them for all they do for you and how much they mean to you.
Enjoy the journey as it goes by real fast!
I signed to UCLA my junior year of high school and was told I was going to start Day 1.
Opening Day at UCLA?
I was sitting the bench. 😭
I had 2 choices:
1. Complain, pout, and blame the coaches
OR
2. Find the holes on the team and become valuable.
So for 3 weeks, I sat the bench.
I showed up early.
Stayed late.
Cheered for my teammates.
Dragged the field every 3rd inning.
Meanwhile, I studied the team.
The middle infielders were doing well.
Third base wasn’t.
So I told the coaches:
“I can play third.”
Then I noticed something else:
Offensively, we were either hitting home runs or getting out.
I saw the gap.
If I could become a tough out, get on base, and bring energy to the team…
I could create value.
Then we played Miami.
The starting third baseman was hitting .115.
They gave me a shot.
I went 2 for 3 with a walk.
Played solid defense.
Brought energy.
I never sat the bench again.
Eventually, I became team captain…
and we were ranked #1 in the country.
One thing baseball taught me:
Opportunities don’t always go to the most talented player.
Sometimes they go to the player who becomes the most valuable.