Monday, December 21, 2015

NCAA Recruiting: Official Visits

Prospective student-athletes are allowed a total of five official visits to Div I schools.  And a PSA can only take one visit per school and spend a total of 48 hours of "on campus" time during the official visit.  These official visits may be taken only during the senior year unlike unofficial visits which can be scheduled during the freshman thru junior year of high school. 

In Div II, the PSA may take unlimited official visits unlike Div I.

With only five visits allowed in Div I it's a good idea to really research what programs to visit.  And schedule the visits in order of interest (from least interest to most interest).  This will give the student-athlete some trial runs on creating a good impression with coaches.  

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

NCAA Recruiting: The Right Bus

Nice article from Both Sides of the Table to keep in mind when it comes to recruiting (unofficial and official visits; contacts and evaluations).   Get on the right bus.  Proximity matters.

http://www.bothsidesofthetable.com/2015/12/06/stay-focused-on-your-goals-not-your-critics/

Monday, December 14, 2015

NCAA Recruiting: Time Management

One of the biggest challenges going from high school to college athletics is time management. 

Not many 18-year old kids are ready to balance the class schedule, social life, and demanding sports schedule.  Work with your student-athlete in junior high and high school to get them ready for the "typical" work week as a student-athlete on scholarship.  Yes...they are getting paid to play so this is a work week with expectations and consequences for falling short (loss of playing time; loss of scholarship)

Are they ready for these expectations during the season?

Full Time Classes:      15 Hours Per Week
Study Time:                30 Hours Per Week (2 hrs per 1 hr class avg.)
Athletics:                    20 Hours Per Week (practice, meetings & game)
TOTAL:                        65 Hours Per Week

Most adults work somewhere between 40-55 hours per week without the physical and mental toll of this kind of demanding pace.

Consider a time management course as a way to jump in front of this "culture shock."  It'll better prepare the athlete and show college recruiters that both the athlete and family "get it." 




Friday, December 11, 2015

NCAA Recruiting Academics: Head Start

Parents and student-athletes can get a head start on "core course" requirements.   While core courses "officially" start the freshman year of high school, if the student takes high school classes such as Algebra I or Spanish I in the eight grade, that may count toward the 16 core course high school requirement. 

These junior high courses must appear on your high school's list of core courses and it must show on the official high school transcript with the grade and credit.

....get a head start in junior high so the student-athlete can focus on recruiting in the senior year of high school.

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Athletic Scholarships: Poor Play No Pay???

A lot of high school athletes and parents have the misunderstanding that a college coach can pull a scholarship once at school for "poor play."  That's not really the case.  While scholarships are renewed on an annual basis each summer, and a coach can ask a scholarship athlete to leave the team there are protections in place for student-athletes.  When not performing up to expectations it is the coach's responsibility to work with the athlete but the scholarship can't be yanked for poor play.

Here are the main valid reason for pulling an athletic scholarship:

* Failure to maintain the required GPA or full-time academic class schedule (12-15 units typically)
* Breaking team or athletic department rules
* Disruptive attitude (this one is subjective and can be grounds for argument)
* Failed drug test
* Violating team/department/school/NCAA policies

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Student-Athlete Development: Pop Tarts

...a pretty good reason why Jerry Seinfeld is Jerry Seinfeld.  Good interview with Jerry on how and why he spent two years developing a single Pop Tart joke.  That's work ethic.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itWxXyCfW5s