Showing posts with label NCSA Athletic Recruiting Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NCSA Athletic Recruiting Reviews. Show all posts

August 24, 2017

College Volleyball Recruiting Management

Please allow me to inject my responses directly into your email below! (original email edited for clarity and privacy!).


Hi, Coach,

I enjoyed sitting in on your session at the Grand Rapids, MI combine in June.  Learned lots. 

​Thank you; I love speaking at Combines (both the AVCA and the Championship Combines events.  It is nice to have a dedicated speaking time to really share as much information as I can.
Now I have a few questions for you.  My daughter is a 6’ 2” sophomore (U15) MH.  You preached that one can never start too early promoting your child as a player, and that a person should get some good quality video together and out there as soon as possible to try and catch coaches’ attention.  

​Let me jump in here; I think what I said may have been misunderstood.  I believe it is never too early to educate yourself about the recruiting process.  If you have read through the collegevolleyballcoach.com ​website, you may remember "Freshman Free and Sophomore Slow".  Because of how important this decision is, and how the recruiting landscape changes, the parents must be educated as soon as possible.  I apologize if I was not clearer on this philosophy when I spoke!

That’s exactly what I did for my daughter.  Then when our club director learned I was sending out her video, I get a note from her saying, in part:  “She is an athlete with a ton of potential, … but she has some room to go at learning to play at a faster speed and higher level.… but the best advice I can give is that it’s not a great idea to call attention to her before she is “ready” … because then when anyone sees her based on a list or an email to a college coach they many only see what she is as opposed to what she can be.”

​As your daughter is 6'2" and a sophomore, you did do the right thing by getting her information and video out to college coaches.  The attack position (MB/OH/RS) recruiting is height driven; the taller the player, the more likely and applicable that 'early' recruiting is going to happen.  ​

I was kind of offended because I was following what you recommended and trust your opinion/experience more.  I mean which is it?  Does a person wait to send video until they’re a finished product (Is any high school kid ever?), or rather expect that qualified, experienced coaches will identify/recognize “potential” which they can mold?  While my daughter is admittedly young and raw and not playing against the highest competition here, she has already had many colleges of all sizes inquire about her since sending this video, so I think it’s having the intended effect. Would a D-I coach really judge a player based on her freshman video that she could never play for him/her?  This director makes it sound as though they’re not going to come back and peek again in 6 months or a year as the athlete develops and ramps up her competition. 

​College coaches recruit on potential, not the finished product because the player is not really finished until her upperclassmen years in college.  As you noted, you have enjoyed a positive response to the video which you promoted.  If a player is a bit raw, but has the desired height, then a college coach would put that player in their recruiting database with a note to see later on in the club season or ask for a current video in a few months.​

This is the same person who told me I should let my daughter handle sending all her own e-mails to coaches, even though she (my daughter) hardly checks her e-mail, much less keeps it organized and responds to appropriately.  She’s simply not mature enough yet to know the value and to care!  My response to the director was:  “I’ll eventually turn this over to her in the next year, but right now the stakes are too high to leave all this to a young adolescent.”  Do you agree?  Is the “parent-agent” model really frowned upon by college coaches?  I know that parents are consummately biased, but don’t coaches understand and just take the video and the measurables (verified by 3rd party) at face value?

​College recruiting and recruiting management is a financial situation​ (cost of club, cost of visits, scholarship offers, scholarship packages) and money is an adult issue.  I think that the marketing and promotion should be a joint venture between player and parent.  Emails are not the language of today's youth but they are the desired form of communication for college coaches (because of compliance and oversight considerations). A college coach will not want to communicate exclusively or mostly with a parent, but we understand that parents will be involved especially during the outreach.

Also, how important is it that she plays “national” level competition for her club?  While she was invited to do so last winter, we really can’t afford what it would cost our family financially, nor do we want her missing church and youth group every Sunday all winter.  It’s just not a price we are willing to pay as a family.  My daughter has already said she may not even want to play D-I (I know you are high on the D-II experience).  However, if she does decide she’d like to, is it impossible for a kid to get a D-I scholarship who hasn’t played national level club.  I know John Cook of my alma mater, Nebraska, has turned many relatively inexperienced players into great college players – some even All-Americans – presumably because he can recognize and mold raw talent.

​The bottom line in any recruiting situation, is does the recruit have the ability/potential to make the collegiate team better?  If so, then the coach will recruit the player.  If not, then the coach will not recruit the player.  

When it comes to club teams, I encourage VolleyFamilies to focus on training as opposed to competition.  While there are many great teams within an elite program, there are instances where a non-national level club will have a great training situation.  Not every national level team will have great coaches, simply because they may have to find 50+ coaches!  

As to your specific question, yes, Division I athletes can come from non national level club programs.  Again, it is all about talent combined with height/athleticism.

By the way, we created a profile for my daughter on NCSA.  Now that it’s supposedly been up and public for 3 weeks, the stats say it’s only gotten one profile review.  ONE!  Does that make any sense for a fairly athletic 6’ 2” sophomore-to-be?  It seems to me that something isn’t working.  I would love to get any thoughts you might have on that.  What can we do to increase traffic?  Admittedly, I’ve only done the free profile/service so far b/c we don’t have a lot of money, and I’m willing to do lots of the leg work myself.

​Specific to the NCSA profile, the Free Profile is "searchable" by college coaches but the free profiles are located on the lower page below the Premium Profile matches.  In addition, this is the slowest recruiting time segment for college coaches; they have been insanely focused on their current collegiate season since later July.  Many VolleyFamilies, especially rising Seniors, get panicky this time of year because of how quiet college coaches are; things will 'heat up' rapidly after Thanksgiving when college programs are addressing the recruiting needs which the season just exposed.

As you are comfortable putting in the work to market and promote your daughter, then use the NCSA Free Profile as the link you send to college coaches, which contains her collegiate stats and current video.​


Thanks,

B.M.


P.S. I’m also making the “evaluation video” as you called it with a couple of complete sets to share even when she was not directly involved in the play.

​By my read of your email, it sounds as if you are doing everything correct - Just stay the course, stay patient during the next couple of months and then after Thanksgiving, have current video to send to college​ coaches in preparation for the traditional recruiting season!

Coach

February 23, 2017

Way too early recruiting question #488

Hi Coach, 

My PSA daughter is a 12-year old, seventh grade, 5'7" outside hitter and setter for her club's 13-1's team. She is still growing and hopes to be about 5'9" when done growing (any taller than that isn't very realistic as her mom is only 5'2").  She has been playing club for three years and volleyball for six.  Her club is a pretty well known national club that competes in the Arizona Region and sends several teams to nationals each year.  She is also an avid beach player.  Volleyball is her passion -- if she could, she would be playing 24/7 all year long.  Indeed, as it is she drives us crazy by walking around the house setting and hitting balls off the wall at all times of day or night.  She loves to hit, but also loves to set and knows setting may be a better longer term option for her given her likely eventual height.  

I read your column regularly and have read your book and am familiar with your timelines, including the concepts expressed in it to take it very slow with recruiting until sophomore year.  That said, even as a 12 year old, my daughter is very interested in playing volleyball in college (particularly ASU, which I know has had some tough volleyball times of late), and asks me frequently about the college coaches at her various national qualifier tournaments and the process of recruiting in general.  

My question relates to the timeline of college recruiting -- my daughter is only 12 (so she is in the class of 2022, which is hard to believe -- so many good volleyball times ahead of her!), but I just read an article posted by the NCSA website you are affiliated with that states:  "The Division I recruiting timeline is the most accelerated of all divisions. DI programs are normally creating lists of athletes they are interested in during their middle school athletic career, and then heavily recruiting them by their freshman and sophomore year, with offers coming shortly after." 

This timeline seems more accelerated than that discussed in your book or columns?  Should my daughter hope to start hearing of interest from D1 programs as early as next year (her second/last year of middle school)?  If she doesn't get that interest in 8th grade is it unlikely that she will be able to compete at the D1 level (unless she grows significantly more in high school) for scholarships?  

Finally, given the NCSA post, when is the right time to post video highlights from her games or skills video to her NCSA profile?  I have been reluctant to do that for her given that she is only 12, but maybe it's not too early....

Thanks for any guidance you can provide. 

Proud AZ Dad 



Thank you for your email and questions.

NCSA Next College Student Athlete, which is my full time position, does a great job of providing valuable recruiting education articles for their Free and Premium members.  NCSA focuses on the trends in recruiting, in addition to the governing body rules, when they share information.  The early recruiting of NCAA Division I athletes has moved beyond a trend, and now is established protocol, but there is such variety in Division I Volleyball programs.  

As the article references, the DI category has the earliest recruiting timelines but there still are differences within DI program's timing.  The top Power Conference programs are evaluating 7th and 8th graders and offering scholarships to 8th grades.  But, the players which are being recruited so young have exceptional height, athletic prowess and advanced skill set; it is obvious to all observers that these are stud players.

The NCSA post also talks about freshman and sophomore scholarship offers - When we move away from those top DI programs, we see the timing of DI recruiting slow down a bit.  The rest of the power conference programs will be offering freshman, the mid major programs will be offering sophomores, the lower DI programs will be offering Juniors, etc.  There are over 300 NCAA Division I volleyball programs, and as you move from #1 to #300, the recruiting occurs later. 

Back to your question, and my answer - Freshman Free and Sophomore slow.  Read that again; no mention of 7th grade.  There is, and should be a, difference in what the college timeline is and what the family timeline is.  I have written quite often about Freshman Free and Sophomore slow because that mantra should apply to the vast majority of club players.  Even if a player is an absolute phenom, it is a stretch to believe that an 8th grader knows exactly what she wants to study in college and where she wants to live while in college.  Sure, there are a few that are Sooner Born and Sooner Bred and when I die, I will be Sooner Dead, but this is the exception, not the rule.

Early commitments by families because of some type of pressure (college coach, club director, peer, etc), has lead to a large number of transfer situations.  Again, how many with graders or even freshman, have the maturity to know what they want in college.

The NCSA article contradicts collegevolleyballcoach.com and Inside College Volleyball (by the way, thanks for purchasing a copy!) only for those outstanding young players, who obviously are going to play for a Top 1o program.  For everyone else, the recruiting efforts of colleges will be focused during their high school years.

Freshman Free is just for the player; let her focus on having fun and improving skill sets.  Mom and Dad, you need to be focusing on recruiting education; academic eligibility, contact and communication rules, the variety of collegiate programs available, the support and reputation of various conferences, etc.  If a school sends an outreach email, then that is great but that is not the goal of a player's freshman year.

Sophomore Slow is as it reads; slowly start to engage in the recruiting outreach with video to colleges based upon the player's goals and family comfort zone.

Because your daughter is only 5'7" (and expected to top out at 5'9") and 12 years old, it is my belief that she will fall into the sophomore to junior recruiting time frame, if she has the skill sets to be a Division I player.  And, there is absolutely nothing negative about that; waiting a big longer in the recruiting process allows your child to mature and clarify her collegiate desires, along with having less time for something bad to occur between commitment and arriving to campus her freshman year.

Enjoy the now, because tomorrow will be here too quickly.

Coach

January 2, 2017

The Coach's Travel Schedule

Club Volleyball has started and so will my NCSA Next Collegiate Student Athlete travel!  It is always great to chat with families who know me through the collegevolleyballcoach.com site and I hope to say hello to even more in 2017!

If you are attending one of these NCSA partner events, please do stop by to say hello!  Below is my January through the end of March schedule and other NCSA Volleyball events!


January 13th to 16th - California Kickoff Combine and California Kickoff Tournament - www.vbcombines.com and/or www.ncva.com

January 13th - KC MLK Combine - I will not be at this event (as I am will be in San Jose, CA) but NCSA will have a great speaker for families at the KC MLK Combine - www.vbcombines.com

January 21st and 22nd - Hawaii Volleyball Combine - Yup, there are some great perks with this job! - http://www.hawaiivolleyballcombine.com

January 27th - Route 66 Combine - In Springfield, MO - www.vbcombines.com

February 17th - STL Recruiting Combine - www.vbcombines.com

February 17th - AVCA College Prep Combine San Jose - I will not be at this event (I am in St. Louis) but NCSA will have a great speaker for families at the event - www.avcaphenom.com/combines/

February 24th - Wichita Combine - www.vbcombines.com

March 3rd - AVCA College Prep Combine Nashville  - www.avcaphenom.com/combines/

March 4th to 6th - Colorado Crossroads (younger weekend - TBD on me attending Crossroads younger weekend, but NCSA will have a booth at the event! - www.coloradocrossroads.org

March 9th to 12th - AVCA College Prep Combine Denver and Colorado Crossroads (older weekend) - www.avcaphenom.com/combines/ and/or www.coloradocrossroads.org

March 24th to 27th - MEQ's Combine and Mid East National Qualifier (MEQs)(Older weekend) - www.vbcombines.com and/or www.capitolsportscenter.com/csc/meq.html

March 30th to April 2nd - MEQ's Combine and Mid East National Qualifier (MEQs)(Younger weekend) - www.vbcombines.com and/or www.capitolsportscenter.com/csc/meq.html



May 2, 2016

NCSA Athletic Recruiting - Reviews and Testimonials

As most of my readers may know, my day job is with NCSA Athletic Recruiting.  I am fortunate because as NCSA's Director of Volleyball, I am able to travel the country educating families about today's college volleyball recruiting process and stay connected with the many friends I have made within the volleyball community during my playing and collegiate coaching career.

What makes my job fulfilling, is that I can immediately help families better understand how to successfully manage the recruiting process during my talks (and onsite at our partner events) and NCSA has a great free site that is available for any player.  The NCSA free site/information is near equivalent to what other companies charge families to receive.  And, for those families which need personal support, the NCSA premium site is the best in the country.  

NCSA Athletic Recruiting now offers a Reviews and Testimonials page so families can see exactly what others are saying.  It is a great vehicle for the Premium families to express their opinions but also for families which are a bit unsure about NCSA to get a better feel for the support available and the successes other families have enjoyed.

If you are a NCSA Premium family, please do share your experience and if you are new to NCSA, please jump on the page to read the reviews.  Again, the link is http://www.ncsasports.org/ncsa-reviews.

Coach