Danny Espinosa: How a big leaguer would develop your kid

Danny Espinosa: How a big leaguer would develop your kid

A former MLB player who coaches travel baseball says winning tournaments is quietly stunting your kid. Subscribe for the insider playbook.

Most travel baseball parents measure a weekend by the scoreboard. Danny Espinosa measures it differently. A former MLB infielder, Long Beach State Dirt Bag, and owner-coach of the OC Crush, Danny sat down with MLB agent Matt Hannaford to explain why a team can win every tournament and develop almost no one. The conversation opens with something Danny witnessed at a 9U event: coaches stealing signs and relaying pitches to nine-year-olds. When he called it out, a coach told him that he should get on board because this is the new age of travel ball. The point that follows is the one you need. Relaying signs may win a game, but it teaches your kid nothing about how to develop properly.

From there, Danny and Matt separate two words parents constantly confuse: advanced and developed. The biggest, strongest 10-year-old usually succeeds early. That is not the same as the player who learns the game properly and keeps growing at 16, 17 and 18. Danny explains why he refuses to cut kids off his own roster, why he would rather a young player build strength and athleticism than obsessing over mechanical adjustments he is not physically ready to repeat, and why Freddy Freeman, whose son plays on Danny's team, preaches the importance of not over-coaching. If you have ever wondered whether your kid needs the best private hitting coach in the area, this section answers it.

The most expensive mistake in youth baseball, according to this conversation, is chasing exposure. Matt makes the insider case directly: exposure does not matter until your child's junior year of high school, around 16 or 17. Before that, Danny asks the question that often stops parents in their tracks. Exposure to what? Your local high school will take the best players, regardless of how many showcases you paid for. The episode reframes the obsession on parents to spend. Put development first, and exposure becomes a byproduct of doing everything else well.

Matt and Danny also work through the questions parents need to ask. Should your kid specialize in baseball or play multiple sports, and why did Bo Jackson's answer surprise a guy who believed the opposite? How many games is too many across across a season? Why are holdbacks a problem for some, especially when it's done too early and the result is a 13-year-old gets hit a line drive at 50 feet, and how might the NCAA five-and-five rule correct it? Adjacent topics include college recruiting, the transfer portal, scholarships, NIL, the MLB Draft and showcases.

It ends where it should. Danny explains why he never talks to his sons in the car after a game, and what his own parents told him that he now repeats to his kids: whether you play one more day, I will always love you regardless of the outcome. If you are deciding how much to invest in your child's baseball, this conversation will change your perspective.

About

Matt Hannaford is an MLB agent who gives you the insider playbook on college recruiting, the transfer portal and MLB Draft decisions. The Most Valuable Agent Podcast helps parents and players navigate the system with confidence.

Links

Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@mostvaluableagent

MVA Website: https://www.aligndsports.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mfhannaford/

#MVAPodcast #TravelBaseball #YouthBaseballDevelopment #CollegeBaseball #MLBDraft

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