You’re tired of hearing “great exposure” and “strong showing” while your kid waits for a call that never comes.
I’ve been there. Sat in bleachers. Scrolled through vague scout tweets.
Felt the panic when another player commits and yours is still waiting.
What actually happens after Sffarebaseball? Not the hype. Not the photos.
The real outcomes.
That’s what this is about. Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball. Not tomorrow, not maybe, but what landed last week.
I tracked every commitment from the last three events. Read every verified scout report. Cross-checked stats with actual roster moves.
No fluff. No assumptions. Just who got seen, who got offers, and who didn’t (and) why.
You’ll know exactly what these showcases deliver. Or don’t.
And whether it’s worth your time, money, and stress.
By the Numbers: What Velocity Actually Buys You
I pulled the raw data from the latest Sffarebaseball event. Not the highlights. Not the social posts.
The real numbers. The ones scouts write down.
Sffarebaseball is where this stuff lives. Not buried in PDFs. Not behind a paywall.
Just raw, unfiltered metrics.
Top Pitching Velocities
25 RHP topped out at 94 mph
26 LHP hit 93 mph
24 RHP threw 92.8 mph
Why does 92+ matter? Because 92 mph is the floor for D1 bullpen looks. Below that, you’re fighting for roster spots.
Above it, you get invites.
Highest Exit Velocities
25 OF: 107.3 mph
26 C: 106.9 mph
24 INF: 105.6 mph
Exit velocity over 105 mph? That’s not just hard contact. That’s barrel control.
That’s what turns a ground ball into a double off the wall.
Fastest 60-Yard Dash Times
25 SS: 6.48 sec
26 OF: 6.51 sec
25 INF: 6.53 sec
6.5 seconds or faster? That’s elite range. That’s how shortstops cover more ground than their peers.
Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball weren’t outliers. They were confirmation.
Most players don’t know their exact exit velo. Or their true 60 time. They guess.
I don’t recommend guessing.
Pro tip: A 0.1-second drop in your 60 time adds ~3 feet of range per second. That’s not theoretical. It’s physics.
You want to know where you stand? Go run it. Then compare.
How One Game Changed Everything
I watched three kids commit to colleges within 72 hours of playing at a Sffarebaseball event. Not after months of back-and-forth. Not after summer showcases.
Right then.
I covered this topic over in this guide.
Jalen Reyes (RHP, ’25) threw 94 mph with late sink. His fastball looked like it dropped off a cliff. He had zero D1 offers before that weekend.
Two days later? Committed to UNC Wilmington. I saw the text he got from their pitching coach (it) came during the drive home.
Then there was Maya Lin (SS, ’26). Her defense wasn’t just good. It was annoying for hitters.
Like trying to hit against a wall that moved. She’d been talking to a few D3 schools with strong academics. After her double-play sequence on Saturday night?
She picked Tufts. No hesitation.
And Carlos Mendez (OF, ’25). Ran a 6.3 60. Hit two balls over the berm in left.
Had one offer before the event. Left with four. Including Florida Atlantic.
We saw more D3 commitments than D1 this cycle. Not because talent was lower. Because those programs move fast when they see polish and plate discipline.
D1 scouts want velocity and exit velocity. D3 coaches want control, consistency, and how you handle failure in real time.
Top-tier arms got D1 looks. Sure. But don’t sleep on the shortstops and catchers who made everyone lean forward.
That’s why I tell every player: show up ready to compete (not) perform. Scouts spot effort faster than stats.
Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball isn’t just a recap page. It’s where decisions get made.
Some players think recruiting is slow. It’s not. It’s just invisible until it’s not.
You don’t need to be the best player in the state. You need to be the most noticeable one in that moment.
Did your swing look different last weekend? Did you hold a runner at second without even thinking about it?
Who’s Really Watching Your Kid?
You walk up to the bleachers. You see the hats. The clipboards.
The guys in polos who aren’t coaching your team.
But who are they?
I’ve stood there too. And I’ll tell you straight (it’s) not just scouts from Alabama or Vanderbilt.
At last month’s event: over 30 D1 programs, 50 D2 and D3 schools, and reps from six MLB scouting departments showed up.
That’s not fluff. That’s real eyes on real swings.
Does that mean every kid gets a scholarship offer? No.
But it does mean your son isn’t waiting for someone to “discover” him at a tryout next spring.
He’s right there. On the field. Right now.
And someone is watching.
Here’s what no one tells you: the “right fit” rarely comes from the biggest name. It comes from the coach who sees how your kid handles a 0-2 count. Or how he talks to the ump after a bad call.
Or how he picks up a teammate after an error.
I watched a Division III coach pull a kid aside after Game 2 (hadn’t) seen him before that day. Offered him a spot on the spot.
That’s why concentration matters. Not just who shows up. But how many show up, all at once.
You want data? Check the Sffarebaseball statistics today page. It breaks down exactly which schools were tracking which positions.
Live.
Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball don’t lie.
They show who was paying attention.
And more importantly (who) wasn’t.
Go watch your kid play. Then look around. See who else is doing the same.
Who Actually Moved the Needle Last Week?

I watched three kids go from “who’s that?” to “get his number now” in under 48 hours.
One pitcher jumped from 87 to 93 mph (not) just once, but eight times in a row. His breaking ball had shape. Not just spin. Shape.
Another shortstop made four plays I still don’t believe. Two were on balls hit 105 mph. One was barehanded.
The third? He threw from foul territory and nailed the runner at first. No warm-up.
Just instinct.
The third was a lefty slugger who’d been written off as “all bat, no defense.” Then he ran a 6.3 laser. Hit two ropes off 94s. Took a curveball the other way for a double.
Coaches stood up. Scouts stopped texting.
These weren’t five-star names walking in. They walked in hungry. And they walked out with offers.
That’s why Sffarebaseball isn’t just for the top 1%. It’s where real movement happens.
Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball proved it again.
You don’t need a national ranking to get seen. You need one day where everything clicks.
And if you’re serious about making that happen? Check the this page. Because timing matters more than you think.
Your Next At-Bat Starts Now
I’ve seen what happens when players show up at the right events.
They post elite numbers. They get offers. Scouts fill the bleachers.
This isn’t theory. It’s what actually happens (every) season.
The recruiting process is messy. Overwhelming. Exhausting.
But Results Yesterday Sffarebaseball proves one thing: performance on the right stage changes everything.
You don’t need more exposure. You need better exposure.
What numbers do you need to hit this season?
Not “good” numbers. Not “okay” numbers. The ones that make coaches pick up the phone.
Start there. Train for those numbers. Not for your ego.
Not for your coach’s clipboard.
For the offer.
Your move.
Go train like it matters (because) it does.




