Really might want to check your facts. This year's team has three player getting regular rotation minutes that started and played on the frosh team - Jordan Bower, Abby James and Sofia Teresi. Elle Hanson, Jacqulyn Micheal, Layla Woods, Makayla Moore, April Chen, both Hernandez sister,s Noemie Bariteau and Natalie Anderson all played multiple years of both frosh and JV in the last couple of years and either started or earned significant playing time.Yes it is quite impressive. But I stand firm on my analysis. If they are playing frosh team as a freshman and jv team as a sophomore? They won't be good enough to see any meaningful minutes on the varsity team especially when the frosh make it to varsity their junior years after putting in the time Mitty will just go out and poach the best players from other schools who will play ahead of them. 🤷
Honestly? Once a girl was placed on the frosh squad she should read the writing on the wall and transfer and go play varsity somewhere else. Somewhere we she will actually get to play in games that aren't just blowouts.
Really might want to check your facts. This year's team has three player getting regular rotation minutes that started and played on the frosh team - Jordan Bower, Abby James and Sofia Teresi. Elle Hanson, Jacqulyn Micheal, Layla Woods, Makayla Moore, April Chen, both Hernandez sister,s Noemie Bariteau and Natalie Anderson all played multiple years of both frosh and JV in the last couple of years and either started or earned significant playing time.
This doesn't take into account lots of other players that moved through the ranks and ended up playing varsity, although not getting tons of minutes, just like any other school.
Isn't the part about only 3 or 4 from the freshman team making it to varsity true almost anywhere where they have a freshman team? Like same at all WCAL schools, right? As you go from middle school, to frosh, to jv, to varsity the internal competition gets tougher and fewer get through the funnel. The funnel is narrower at the better programs, but the phenomenon is the same.You have pointed out that it is indeed possible for players who started on the Frosh team make it on the varsity squad in their junior year. But the 3 you named probably could have played a ton of varsity minutes elsewhere. I agree with northbaybbguru in that if I were on the Frosh team today and I saw another player (or two) in my year be picked to be on varsity, then the chance that I would get meaningful minutes as a varsity player 2 or 3 years later (when I'm a junior or senior on varsity) is not high. There are usually 10 players on Frosh and maybe another 10 on JV at any given year. To only name maybe 3 or 4 at any given time to make it all the way to varsity is not a promising stat. Jordan Bowar, Abby James, Sofia Teresi all put in the time and the work since the 9th grade blowing out teams. None of them start, but at least they get to touch the ball. Many others don't play a single minute of most games.
You are correct that the three I pointed out on this year's team could have played a ton of minutes somewhere else, but they chose to stay at Mitty and be part of something special. It's not always about playing time. This is absolutely no different than a player choosing to go to a D1 college program and not playing a lot vs. going D2 or D3 and starting. Each player makes their own decisions for their own reasons.You have pointed out that it is indeed possible for players who started on the Frosh team make it on the varsity squad in their junior year. But the 3 you named probably could have played a ton of varsity minutes elsewhere. I agree with northbaybbguru in that if I were on the Frosh team today and I saw another player (or two) in my year be picked to be on varsity, then the chance that I would get meaningful minutes as a varsity player 2 or 3 years later (when I'm a junior or senior on varsity) is not high. There are usually 10 players on Frosh and maybe another 10 on JV at any given year. To only name maybe 3 or 4 at any given time to make it all the way to varsity is not a promising stat. Jordan Bowar, Abby James, Sofia Teresi all put in the time and the work since the 9th grade blowing out teams. None of them start, but at least they get to touch the ball. Many others don't play a single minute of most games.
You had to bring that up. (And it was only 16.)Just watched Mitty’s frosh beat Carondelet’s previously undefeated JV team by about 20.
Clay ... I take it you are too busy this weekend to read through this entire thread. If you had, you would see that Letsski (who is very familiar with the Mitty program) just gave the names of like 13 kids who within the past few years started out on Mitty frosh then went on to play significant roles on Mitty varsity and most all now play in college. Did many others not achieve those heights? Sure. Just like everywhere.If a girl plays on the frosh team, it is highly unlikely she will ever play on varsity.
As for Mitty, as far as I could tell, one player from their junior-heavy JV, which beat my 19-4 JVs in a scrimmage and a game by a combined score of 169-22, made their varsity this year.
It's different on the boys' side, because boys grow later. Most girls are as tall as they're going to get as freshmen -- boys can add five to 10 inches and that changes everything.
Will Pinewood every return to the top? We will see.Folsom beat Pinewood 66-50