Your kid has cleats. You have a glove or whatever sport-specific equipment lives in the garage. Now you need the support infrastructure. Recovery tools that prevent muscle soreness from becoming an excuse to sit out. Hydration systems that work for a three-game Saturday. Travel logistics that get everything to the tournament site without forgetting the mouthguards.
Here is what you actually need for the season itself.
Recovery and body care
A season runs on recovery. Not just for the serious travel-ball kids, but for your kid and yours. A foam roller gets used more than it sounds like it should. A lacrosse ball for trigger points is $4 and saved me from a frozen shoulder twice.
A foam roller (mid-size, 24–36 inches)
Foam rollers work for IT band soreness, quad tightness, and the general muscle fatigue that comes from practice-game-practice rotations. A mid-size roller is portable enough to throw in a car and dense enough to actually do something.
Get one rated for your body weight. Some roll easier, some harder. Medium density works for most parents and kids aged 10+.
Our pick. Around $25–40.
A lacrosse ball or trigger-point ball
A single hard ball gets into muscle knots where a foam roller can’t reach. Neck, foot, hip. Put it on the ground, lie on it, move slowly. Your kid will complain until the soreness stops, then ask for it again.
Our pick. Around $5–12.
Kinesio tape (pre-cut or tape + scissors)
Pre-cut tape strips for ankle, knee, or shoulder are faster than learning to cut your own. Keep a pack in the car for game days. Most athletic tape works the same; pick whatever sticks reliably.
Our pick. Around $8–15 per pack of 20 strips.
Instant cold packs (chemical, no freezer)
Ice pack that activates without a freezer. Keep a few in the car. Good for immediate sprains, sore joints, or swelling from a hit.
Our pick. Around $6–10 per pack of two.
Ankle braces or compression sleeves
If your kid has rolled an ankle before or plays a cutting sport, a re-usable ankle brace prevents repeat injuries. Slip-on compression sleeves for knees or calves also help with mild swelling or support.
Our pick. Around $20–35.
Compression socks (1–2 pairs)
Not magic, but useful for recovery after games. Some kids swear by them for reducing soreness the next morning. Pair them with 8 hours of sleep and you might see a difference.
Our pick. Around $15–30 per pair.
Hydration and fuel
The most-ignored part of performance. A kid who drinks steadily through practice plays better in the fourth quarter than a kid who drinks once. A reusable bottle gets used more often than disposable bottles.
A reusable water bottle (32 oz, insulated)
Thirty-two ounces is the sweet spot for a kid. Big enough to matter, light enough to carry. Insulation keeps water cool for hours if practices are long or the weather is hot.
Hydro Flask and Yeti are standard. Owala makes a good one with a flip cap if your kid likes one-handed drinking. The label matters less than whether your kid will actually use it.
Our pick. Around $30–50.
Electrolyte powder (Nuun or Liquid IV)
Water alone isn’t enough after hard exertion or hot weather. Electrolyte mix replaces sodium and potassium that get lost in sweat. Single-serving packets for travel, tubs for home.
Nuun has flavor and low calories. Liquid IV has more calories (useful post-game). Either works.
Our pick. Around $15–25 per tub or $1–2 per packet.
Post-game protein shake supplies
Within 30 minutes of a hard game or tournament, protein and carbs help recovery. Chocolate milk works. A protein powder mixed with milk or water also works.
Get a flavor your kid will drink. Vanilla and chocolate are safe. Store-bought shakes work if mixing feels like one more thing.
Our pick. Around $15–30 per tub.
Real-food snacks (nuts, dried fruit, whole-grain bars)
Between-games snacks matter. Granola bars, mixed nuts, dried fruit, string cheese, peanut butter crackers. Carbs and protein, not sugar crash.
Pack these in a small bag. Your kid will eat them if they’re there.
Around $15–30 per week depending on quantity and brand.
Travel logistics
Weekend tournaments and tournament weekends require a small supply chain.
A hard cooler (45–70 quart for tournaments)
A hard cooler that keeps ice for 24+ hours. Yeti, RTIC, Orca, Coleman all work at different price points. Buy one you’ll actually fill and keep in the car year-round.
If tournaments are regular, you’ll use it constantly. If they’re occasional, a 45-quart takes less space in the garage than a 70-quart.
Our pick. Around $90–200 depending on brand.
A soft cooler (20–30 quart for single games)
A lightweight soft cooler for a single game where you don’t need overnight ice. Easier to carry than a hard cooler.
Our pick. Around $30–60.
Packing cubes or small organizers
Tournament weekends mean extra socks, undershirts, warm layers, and recovery gear all jammed into one small bag. Packing cubes keep it organized and save time when you need a specific item.
Our pick. Around $15–25.
Portable laundry kit (small bottles of sport wash, stain stick)
Grass stains happen. Sweat stains set fast. Travel-size sport wash and a stain stick let you rinse gear the night before travel home instead of letting it set in the hotel room.
Our pick. Around $8–12.
Travel power strip with USB (surge-protected)
Phones, charging cables, and the occasional blow dryer all need outlets at a tournament hotel. A power strip and 2-3 USB ports fit in a small bag.
Our pick. Around $15–25.
Replacement consumables
These wear out every season. Buy in bulk before season starts.
Athletic socks (multi-pack, moisture-wicking)
Your kid needs 4–6 pairs of performance socks. Not cotton. Merino wool or synthetic blend that dries fast.
Our pick. Around $20–30 per six-pack.
Athletic tape (1–2 rolls)
Ankle tape, finger tape, or wrap-everything-that-hurts tape. Every sideline needs some. Buy the roll, learn to cut strips, or buy pre-cut and keep both.
Our pick. Around $4–8 per roll.
Mouthguards (2–3 replacement guards if contact sport)
Mouthguards get lost, sit on, or chewed through. Keep spares. Boil-and-bite guards are cheap and work fine until your kid wants something custom.
Our pick. Around $5–15 per guard.
Batting gloves or grip tape (if applicable)
Batting gloves wear out. Grip tape for sticks, bats, or rackets tears. Budget replacement pairs mid-season.
Our pick. Around $12–25 per pair.
Photography and memory
End-of-season gifts and memory-keeping matter more than they feel like they will.
A phone tripod (lightweight, 6–8 inches)
Prop your phone on the sideline, record a few plays, capture the energy of a close game. Lightweight tripods fit in a bag and stay in a car all season.
Our pick. Around $12–25.
An action camera (GoPro or similar)
If tournament weekends are happening, an action camera mounted on a helmet or stuck in a fence captures footage your kid will actually watch and treasure. Optional, but high memory value.
Our pick. Around $150–250 for entry-level.
A jersey shadow box (12x16, ready-made frame)
After the season ends, the jersey comes home. A shadow box or frame preserves it without it sitting in a pile on a shelf. End-of-season gift to your kid.
Our pick. Around $25–45.
Photo book service (Shutterfly, Artifact Uprising)
Upload season photos, get a 20–40 page book bound and printed. Costs $30–60, worth every penny.
Our pick. Around $35–60 per book.
Coach gifts and team thank-yous
End-of-season tradition. Low cost, high meaning.
Coach gift ideas
A travel mug with the team name or year. A gift card to a local coffee shop. A framed team photo. Budget $20–40 per coach if you’re the parent organizing it.
Team mom or volunteer thank-you
A small gift card or a handwritten note. The parent who managed snacks all season did real work. $10–20 per person covers coffee, wine, or a candle.
Framed team photo template
Order a large team photo (8x10 or 11x14), frame it for under $30. If you’re the team parent, this is a standard end-of-season ask.
Our pick. Around $15–30.
What we’d actually buy
Grab a mid-range foam roller, a hard cooler if tournaments are happening, a good insulated water bottle, and a multi-pack of athletic socks. The rest layers in over the season as you discover what your kid needs. You’ll know within two weeks which items live in the car and which ones never leave the house.