awarsoca wrote:The basic one...have they changed the design to be more kid friendly? I know the Rawlings website indicate the GG is designed for a smaller hand, I just can not figure out why.Thoughts?
The GG Pro-taper series is made with smaller hand opening and finger stalls for a better fit on the hands of youth players. Rawlings still has a series of GG gloves for adult hands as well. I have found that parents buying adult gloves that are too big for their kids' hand is the single most frequent mistake made in the purchase of baseball gear. The conventional belief seems to be that glove sizes are like shoes so buy something the kid will grow into. This makes for the development of poor catching and ball handling characteristics. Akadema led the way in devloping a line of quality gloves for youth players. Not to be outdone, Rawlings and others followed suit to capture the "select" or "travel" youth baseball market. I have bought a couple pro-taper gloves for my son (catcher's mitt, 11.25" mod trap) and they are awesome with high quality construction, good leather, etc. and I put them at the top of the list for "youth baseball gloves" at an affordable price. I rate the Omaha TPX youth gloves 2nd. Everyone else, Easton, Nike, Mizuno , and Akadema in an undifferentiated 3rd place group, with the Wilson A-500 series bringing up the rear.
To be sure, its like comparing apples and oranges to a large extent because the Rawlings runs for $70 to $90; the TPX, Easton, Mizuno, and Akadema in the ~ $60 range; and Wilson ~$40. You get what you pay for in all ~$40 range gloves (all brands) so folks should not expect much. These gloves are ideal for rec players who won't play many games in a season, or catch with hard throwers.