Jun06
The Secrets to being Recruited
By Matt Valentine
Most often when athletes think about being recruited they imagine receiving letters from colleges, phone calls from coaches, trips to campuses, and ultimately scholarship offers. The fact is however, that a majority of high school athletes will never be courted in such a dramatic fashion. Only about .8% of athletes playing sports at the high school level will be offered a Division I scholarship. Considering that that leaves a vast majority of athletes out of the picture how do the majority of athletes get recruited?
THE FACTORS:
Talent. The first and most obvious factor is talent. Talent of course, thrusts the athlete into the spotlight and forces coaches to notice them. a colleague of mine, Gus Ornstein was a highly touted prospect coming out of Fieldston Prep School, in the Bronx, NY and his experience is vastly different from that of your average athletes. If you are as talented as Gus playing at the next level is not your biggest concern, picking the right school is. For people in this situation Gus offers a word of advice, “you need to be happy with wherever you are in case football (or whatever sport you play) does not work out for you”.
It is important for athletes with this level of talent to keep in mind that sports is not the only reason you are attending college. Go on as many visits as possible, talk to as many atheletes as possible ,or even just members of the student body. Find out what they like about the school and what they don’t. Measure what is truly important to you and determine if this is the place you want to spend the next 4-5 years of your life.
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