Top Five College Athletic Recruiting Tips
1. Maintain that GPA . You may be all that and a bag of chips on the filed/court/course, but without the grades, your recruiting opportunities significantly diminish. Increasingly, colleges want students who think, not just play. Plus, the NCAA has core requirements. Make sure you meet them. Take ACT and/or SAT until you get the score you want/need.
2. Continue to develop your sport : in-season, off-season and via summer programs. Consider an opposite season second sport, or better yet, become a yogi or Pilates practitioner. Physical activity that involves the mind and stretching the body means less injury, less burnout. Namaste.
3. Draft an Athletic Resume (Google it) and prepare video. Plan unofficial visits to your top college choices. Phone contact is permissible at various times after your junior year.
4. Research colleges and universities and become an expert on DI, DII and DII requirements as well as admission requirements for schools that interest you (or that may have shown an interest IN you). Junior year – Email coach in your sport at schools you have an interest and send resume. Complete the online questionnaires . Register with the NCAA Eligibility Center or NAIA Eligibility Center.
5. Organization and timely responses are key when communicating with coaches. Keep them informed of athletic progress and any ‘resume’ changes. Schedule official college visits. Submit applications and complete all scholarship and financial aid forms. Be very aware of all deadlines , they are unforgiving.
Oh, and when you land that sweet athletic scholarship, be sure to formally thank all those who helped you along the way. Um, hello Mom, Dad, Coach…


