This was RC Jr's first inning pitching this year. 22 pitches, 2 walks and 3 strike outs. Other team scored once on a steal due to bad throw back from the catcher.
[youtube=425,350]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wq6jQ7vz3ug[/youtube]
Thanks for letting me share. 
Semper Fi my friend,
Boy those photos bring back memories. I coached for fifteen years and my youngest was actually a college All American back in the mid 80's. Now my youngest grandson is starting to play T-ball. Those years were some of the most exciting of our life.
As a guy who coached and has been all the way down the road let me pass along some philosophy you actually may not have heard before.
At the age your son is the goals are simple. Teach them the game, teach them how to play the game properly, teach them to like the game. Do that and they will practice by themselves a whole lot more than the orgainzed practices because they love the game. Winning is irrelevant, the measure of success for your season is this. If 100% of the kids go out for baseball the following year you had a successful season.
Let me share one of my learning experiences. We all wanted our kids to be the next hall of famer in the major leagues. When my son played in college the stats were astounding. Out of every 100 kids that were good enough to be drafted and signed by a professional team (and you have to be damn good to get that far), four out of 100 will play in a major league game, and two of the 100 will play long enough to qualify for the pension plan.
One of my high school friends coached a kid in Texas named Kelly Gruber who was a journeyman ballplayer in the major leagues. A great home run hitter in their little league might hit 8 HR's........Gruber hit 29. I saw ARod as a 16 year old in a high school tournament (of which four kids ended up playing major league baseball)....and as a 16 year old he was so far above anyone else on the field it was amazing. In talking with some friends of my son who are now scouts, they told me they knew about ARod when he was a 12 year old playing little league.
I would never do anything to discourage a kid, moreso just need the dads to have realistic perspectives. I am a personal believer that every kid should be able to play to a level where he can no longer compete. The kids are the first to know that they are in over their head. If they maximized their God-given athletic ability, then as a parent you really can't ask for more than that.
A funny story. When my son was a college freshman, the varsity team had finished fourth in the nation the year before and their entire infield was returning. First practice they are taking infield and my son turns to the coach and says "Wow coach! Those guys are impressive." Coach turns to him and says, "You ought to be impressed, there are four college All Americans out there." Talk about intimidating a freshman kid, wow! The good news is when you are practicing with guys better than you are you improve...
Enjpy the ride my friend, as I said earlier, you will look back on these years and love the memories....
regards,
5412