Watch the full broadcast of the 2019 14u Perfect Game Select Baseball Festival played on Sunday, September 1 at JetBlue BallPark in Fort Myers, Florida.
@@crunchwrapsupreme9372 he means other baseball players that are not at the top level of 14u. the main reason why is because those players haven't fully developed yet, compared to the people in PG league
@@joeysumma9552 this sounds like someone that i faced in little league. Hit tanks, threw 70-75mph. Didnt see him again for 3 years, until a few months ago when i saw him at the mall wearing a Virginity Rocks sweatshirt😂
Most of the kids are just turning 15. Every age group is like that 16u is usually kids closer to 17u. Everyone just doesn’t understand these are the top kids in the country for 14u baseball. Everyone’s salty
Aimbot Lol obviously there’s maybe some kids out there that aren’t noticed but these kids are mostly committed to d1 schools it’s not like they’re just gonna stop working and let ppl pass them up
@Ryn sorry this comment came across the wrong way what I meant was that there are people with similar mechanics but don’t have the size but by high school they will have grown and some are going to pass them. I just dislike the idea of saying these players are going to future mlb players since this age it’s so hard to judge since the most of these players have such a psychical advantage the over time will the will be on more of an even playing field
@@crisyboiboi9380 he’s an accelerator, he accelerated his body by drifting it forward while transitioning into peak leg lift. His launch position at landing is perfect, arm up and 90 degrees and elbow just below shoulder. His hip to shoulder separation is in human, I’ve never seen anything like it. His lead leg block at release is amazing, he seems the reason he throws 97 as a sophomore and you’re sitting at home criticizing a 16 year old
These kids aren’t here because of their size, though. Their physical stats have nothing to do with the fact that they are the best youth baseball players in the world. They are prodigies. They have a talent that is so insanely rare that when you see it organized and all brought together on such a scale, at such a young age, and then condensed down to fewer than 20 “select” players, it’s like watching art. But it’s also like watching history unfold before your eyes because you know that a lot of these kids will one day be household names, or at least known and respected by baseball fans and people like me, who work on the bodies of professional athletes for a living.