About Strike Force Baseball Academy
Strike Force Baseball Academy is a batting cage located in Hudson, Ohio. Located at 793 Seasons Road. Visit for more details on hours, availability, and amenities.
Facility features
- Baseball
Reviews
- Dalton Rimbert5
Really like this facility - my kid loves the hitting machine - he had a great year in his U10 league. Hitting improved 10-fold once he started, currently working in Brandon's young athletes' program. Everyone at the front desk is nice, great space, plenty of room for all your baseball needs.
7 months ago
- JW Ohio3
2025 12U fell short of expectations - dad coach limited what the paid coach was able to do and the paid coach brought much value to the boys. Wife of the coach was not on the coaching staff and in the dugout every game. We have never experienced this before. The last five years of baseball for us there were strict rules keeping parents out of the dugout to allow kids to focus on playing the game and being supported by there coaches. Not sure what the thought was here but it certainly did not add value to the experience for the kids. Dad coach was consistently late and didn't have a good system for warming up the kids in comparison to travel ball standards. While the organization, Diamond Boys which operates out of the Strike Force Baseball Academy means well. The results fell short of what you'd expect for $2,300 plus additional costs for this being a Cooperstown year. This was a developmental team but the dad coach put most of the focus on his son's success. The son was one of four pitchers heavily used throughout the season with little to no use of the other boys who would have stepped up to pitch. This led us to having no pitching options in Cooperstown which showed that foundational the kids were not setup for success through the long almost 50 game season. There are skills competition at Cooperstown. Home Run Derby, Team Relay, Turn Two, Fastest Player. There was no communication on how the selection would be done. His son was chosen for the Home Run Derby and there were at least 2 other kids that should have been in the running. It would been nice to see a competition leading up to this allowing the kids to compete for a place in the skills competitions. The coach dad didn't do so well pitching to his son at times throwing the ball behind him. The son went right to the mound and had to be separated by another staff member to prevent an altercation. You don't have to take this review as a stand alone review. You can ask to review the teams stats on Game changer and you'll see supporting documents. We probably could go on and on but why...simply dig into what the plan is, expectations, ask to speak with parents on the team and dare I say it...ask the parents who left I am guessing there are up to 7 families who would like to not return but some might have to because of the limited options out there. Best of luck hopefully, this will a learning lesson for the organization and they will hold the dad coaches accountable meet the standards set in the about the Diamond Boys page on their website: "Our goal has and always will be to help our players become better athletes, better people, and provide the opportunity to showcase their talents to both college and professional scouts through league and tournament play. We pride ourselves on the player development we provide. We will work hard to develop our players into fine young men, both on and off the field, and prepare them for the road ahead!" Hopefully, they will proactively inspect this and not try to sort at in a frenzy with rushed exit interviews.
10 months ago
- CTown Rocks2
Things to know before committing to Diamond Boys Baseball (Strike Force Academy): • Some teams are labeled “developmental” but now rebranded as “club” — they’re still developmental. • Lack of transparency about team level and expectations until after payment. • Closed practices and BCC’d parent emails limit visibility and shield issues within the program. • Be especially wary of the 2025 12U developmental team moving to 13U: • Dominated by “dad coach” dynamics, with a focus on babying certain players • Development takes a backseat to favoritism and control • A coach’s mom regularly in the dugout, creating a distracting and uncomfortable environment for the team • Overall: For the money being spent, the quality, professionalism, and player development fall short. Ask direct questions and don’t assume this is traditional travel ball.
10 months ago
- Debbie Duke5
Very comfortable, friendly and know their stuff Took in 8 year old for a 30 minute batting class. Was happy with everything
11 months ago
Reviews via Google. Ratings may have changed.