9-year-old barred for pitching too well

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Nine-year-old Jericho Scott is a good baseball player - too good, it turns out.

The right-hander has a fastball that tops out at about 40 mph. He throws so hard that the Youth Baseball League of New Haven told his coach that the boy could not pitch any more. When Jericho took the mound anyway last week, the opposing team forfeited the game, packed its gear and left, his coach said.

Officials for the three-year-old league, which has eight teams and about 100 players, said they will disband Jericho's team, redistributing its players among other squads, and offered to refund $50 sign-up fees to anyone who asks for it. They say Jericho's coach, Wilfred Vidro, has resigned.

But Vidro says he didn't quit and the team refuses to disband. Players and parents held a protest at the league's field on Saturday urging the league to let Jericho pitch.

"He's never hurt any one," Vidro said. "He's on target all the time. How can you punish a kid for being too good?"

The controversy bothers Jericho, who says he misses pitching.

"I feel sad," he said. "I feel like it's all my fault nobody could play."

Jericho's coach and parents say the boy is being unfairly targeted because he turned down an invitation to join the defending league champion, which is sponsored by an employer of one of the league's administrators.

Jericho instead joined a team sponsored by Will Power Fitness. The team was 8-0 and on its way to the playoffs when Jericho was banned from pitching.

"I think it's discouraging when you're telling a 9-year-old you're too good at something," said his mother, Nicole Scott. "The whole objective in life is to find something you're good at and stick with it. I'd rather he spend all his time on the baseball field than idolizing someone standing on the street corner."


League attorney Peter Noble says the only factor in banning Jericho from the mound is his pitches are just too fast.

"He is a very skilled player, a very hard thrower," Noble said. "There are a lot of beginners. This is not a high-powered league. This is a developmental league whose main purpose is to promote the sport."

Noble acknowledged that Jericho had not beaned any batters in the co-ed league of 8- to 10-year-olds, but say parents expressed safety concerns.

"Facing that kind of speed" is frightening for beginning players, Noble said.

League officials say they first told Vidro that the boy could not pitch after a game on Aug. 13. Jericho played second base the next game on Aug. 16. But when he took the mound Wednesday, the other team walked off and a forfeit was called.

League officials say Jericho's mother became irate, threatening them and vowing to get the league shut down.

"I have never seen behavior of a parent like the behavior Jericho's mother exhibited Wednesday night," Noble said.

Scott denies threatening any one, but said she did call the police.

League officials suggested that Jericho play other positions, or pitch against older players or in a different league.

Local attorney John Williams was planning to meet with Jericho's parents Monday to discuss legal options.

"You don't have to be learned in the law to know in your heart that it's wrong," he said. "Now you have to be punished because you excel at something?"
 

KotysDad

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Thinking back to when I was a kid I can count on one hand the number of times my parents actually watched me play in a Little League or rec league sports game. My mom would drop us off at the park then head back home to do her housework. We'd walk back home in a group and spend the rest of the day goofing off at the local rec center. Our games were always late morning or early afternoon so dads were usually working, but we would give them the play-by-play at dinner when they got home.

Never had any of these problems back then. When in the hell did little leagues cease to be about the kids???

Sad.
 

gardenweasel

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Thinking back to when I was a kid I can count on one hand the number of times my parents actually watched me play in a Little League or rec league sports game. My mom would drop us off at the park then head back home to do her housework. We'd walk back home in a group and spend the rest of the day goofing off at the local rec center. Our games were always late morning or early afternoon so dads were usually working, but we would give them the play-by-play at dinner when they got home.

Never had any of these problems back then. When in the hell did little leagues cease to be about the kids???

Sad.

same thing here....excellent post dad.......

and now attorneys are involved?.....

lord love a duck....a world gone mad...,
 

ppabart

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Pitching too well? Really? Come on. Sounds to me like the team that wanted this little pitching phenom got a case of the red ass when he decided to stay and play with his friends on his usual team, instead of jumping ship to the team that wins it all every year. Now to retaliate, they handle things this way. If you can't beat em, don't let him play??? B.S.

I remember when I was growing up, there were 4 teams in our league. I was on 1 of the 2 teams that competed for the top spot every year. The other team had a guy that threw absolute gas and when he toed the rubber, seldom did any team score. We didn't cry about it. Just sucked.....but we dealt with it. Such a shame that parents make things about them and not the kids anymore :nono:
 

The Sponge

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i wish this happen when i was nine. We had a kid who threw like this and was a wild fuker. Hit me on the forearm once and the threads from the ball were on my arm for over a week. Terrifying hitting off of this guy even at 12:mj07: Prick had a beard at twelve. Was fun tho when he was on my team in the allstars. Watching these other kids being terrified was worth the wait. My old man was umping once when the kid was eleven and the kid threw one in the dirt and hit my dad on the calve's and it swelled like one of Hillary's calve's. Homeruns this kid hit at 11 and 12 would have been out of any big league park in America.
 

ppabart

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i wish this happen when i was nine. We had a kid who threw like this and was a wild fuker. Hit me on the forearm once and the threads from the ball were on my arm for over a week. Terrifying hitting off of this guy even at 12:mj07: Prick had a beard at twelve. Was fun tho when he was on my team in the allstars. Watching these other kids being terrified was worth the wait. My old man was umping once when the kid was eleven and the kid threw one in the dirt and hit my dad on the calve's and it swelled like one of Hillary's calve's. Homeruns this kid hit at 11 and 12 would have been out of any big league park in America.

Did you grow up in North Carolina? Certainly sounds like the same guy I grew up playing against. Facial hair and all.
 

The Sponge

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Did you grow up in North Carolina? Certainly sounds like the same guy I grew up playing against. Facial hair and all.

:mj07: Was your kid wild? He hit me like ten times. Once in the ribs that it took me two hours to get to first base. They had to stop the game and throw some new dirt down at home plate to cover up my tears.:mj07: I saw the kid about five years ago and he said he played in the WhiteSox farm system but i don't know if it was true. I heard he got all messed up in drugs. This was in Pa.
 

kellyindallas

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Pitching too well? Really? Come on. Sounds to me like the team that wanted this little pitching phenom got a case of the red ass when he decided to stay and play with his friends on his usual team, instead of jumping ship to the team that wins it all every year. Now to retaliate, they handle things this way. If you can't beat em, don't let him play??? B.S.

I remember when I was growing up, there were 4 teams in our league. I was on 1 of the 2 teams that competed for the top spot every year. The other team had a guy that threw absolute gas and when he toed the rubber, seldom did any team score. We didn't cry about it. Just sucked.....but we dealt with it. Such a shame that parents make things about them and not the kids anymore :nono:

What a bunch of wusses! What is wrong with these parents? Waaaaaaah! You teach your kid to run and hide instead of compete? That's pathetic. That's what's wrong with this country today, a bunch of pampered pussified babies. Waaaah, it hurt little Johnny's self-esteem because the pitcher threw too hard! What happened to appreciating greatness and excellence?

I played Little League baseball (yep, with the boys and I was an all-star) and no one back in my day would have put up with this attitude. This is the result of the self-esteem movement of the 80's...who cares about RESULTS, it's all about how people FEEL. :scared Boy, they are setting up their kids for some real disappointment in the real world.
 

KotysDad

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What a bunch of wusses! What is wrong with these parents? Waaaaaaah! You teach your kid to run and hide instead of compete? That's pathetic. That's what's wrong with this country today, a bunch of pampered pussified babies. Waaaah, it hurt little Johnny's self-esteem because the pitcher threw too hard! What happened to appreciating greatness and excellence?

I played Little League baseball (yep, with the boys and I was an all-star) and no one back in my day would have put up with this attitude. This is the result of the self-esteem movement of the 80's...who cares about RESULTS, it's all about how people FEEL. :scared Boy, they are setting up their kids for some real disappointment in the real world.

Couldnt agree more here.

My son played on a Select baseball team for a couple years a few years ago and there were a few teams with pitchers who could throw hard and invariably you'd have a few kids who would instinctively step away during their swing - the ole bail out. But you told the kid to hang in there and take your cuts.

Of course there are some politics at play here, but to make their point at the expense of the kids is disgraceful. All the kids learn from this is it's better to walk away from superior players then stand in there and maybe learn something. Sure you're gonna take your bumps and bruises, but thats part of growing up.
 

yyz

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Who fuking cares? :shrug:

We're a nation of pussies, and this just furthers the case.

It started when they stopped grading kids in school, because THAT hurt their feelings, too.
 

bubbas1

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Isnt the kid being so good and at this level of play just holding him back. I think his parents should have moved him to a higher level before the season even started. What good is it doing this kid throwing at kids that are to scared to swing?

Because it got so far into the season before anyone started complaining he should be allowed to finish out the year with his team and then be moved to a more compeditive league next year. I bet if this team was 0-8 you wouldnt here one peep from anyone.
 

The Sponge

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Isnt the kid being so good and at this level of play just holding him back. I think his parents should have moved him to a higher level before the season even started. What good is it doing this kid throwing at kids that are to scared to swing?

Because it got so far into the season before anyone started complaining he should be allowed to finish out the year with his team and then be moved to a more compeditive league next year. I bet if this team was 0-8 you wouldnt here one peep from anyone.

That is exactly what i was thinking but i haven't read much about this story. When i coached 10,11 and 12 year olds i sent down two ten year old kids and brought up a nine and a ten year old from the younger league.:shrug: The kids i sent down, i was scared to death when a ball was hit to them.
 

The Sponge

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The kid is on espn now. Shit i would rather hit off him easy compared to that nut i had to hit off of.
 

The Sponge

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Ah the parents didn't want to move him up. Horse shit if that is my kid he would move up. Sounds like the parents liked watching him dominate.
 

WhatsHisNuts

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Growing up, I was always one of the two or three best players in my little league, but there was always one kid (it changed every year) who put the fear of god (I believed in it then) in all the kids. I remember all of them. I remember what it felt like before stepping in the box to face them. I don't remember much about those days, but I remember those feelings.

Nice to see the dumbass adults taking away memories like those from the kids. When did it become a bad idea to challenge a kid or teach them to face their fears? Riiculous.
 

yyz

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Based on guys in this thread alone, we should be able to take a gold medle in the next fuking olympics.
 

The Sponge

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Exactly....

Morris back when i played our fireballer kid had a bad temper also. In one allstar game we only had nine guys so somehow my dad (the coach)got my younger brother who was 9 on the roster for this one game. Not sure how he swung this but sure enough, our fireballer got tossed out of the game. He was out at second and took his helmut and smashed it into 100 pieces lol. My brother looked scared shit less but truth of the matter is that my brother at nine was probably as good as me at 12. Man i hated batting against that kid, and what might have been worse was playing the infield when he was hitting.:mj07: when i pitched to him and i knew i was the first batter up the next inning i threw up balls that were so easy to hit so the kid wasn't mad the next inning when i led off. Strike this kid out boy did he get pissed.
 
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