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Athletically sound and
college bound
Blazers shoot for athletic success in the aggressive, complex world of
college recruitment
Ellie
Blalock,
Managing Sports Editor,
SilverChips
3/17/2005
When senior varsity girls basketball co-captain Brittany Higgins received
her first college recruitment letter in her junior year, it meant not only
that she was one step closer to playing college ball and hopefully to her
dream of someday playing in the WNBA, but also that she had just become, in
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) jargon, a "recruited
prospective student athlete."
As of that moment, Higgins
could no longer exchange more than a quick "hello" with a college coach
without it being considered an official face-to-face "contact" (illegal
until the July after her junior year). Yet somehow, she was expected to sort
through countless letters and phone calls on her own in search of her
perfect match: a Division I school, preferably in North Carolina, that could
offer her the right combination of academics and competitive playing time.
Higgins is among several Blazers and thousands of high school athletes
nationwide who have entered the intricate courtship that is the college
athletics recruitment process. As a greater number of talented athletes try
to get a foot in the door of top schools, the process has become more
competitive than ever, and in turn, coaches have become more aggressive in
their pursuit of that elusive star athlete willing to sign on immediately.
In order to secure the spot they want and avoid getting roped into the wrong
contract, athletes must be willing to advocate for themselves both in
getting exposure and in finding a school that matches their goals.
Phone calls
and letters
A variety of colleges (some local, some not) ranging from Division
I to Division III have shown interest in Higgins, a three-year
varsity basketball player who is generally among Blair's top
scorers. At this point, she is very interested in High Point
University and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and
has begun talking to coaches at both schools.
Although
Higgins's experiences with college coaches and coaching assistants
have been generally good, she knows of other athletes with horror
stories of coaches calling morning and night. "They want to know
if you're interested," Higgins says. "I've heard that some coaches
just call, call, call. It gets kind of annoying if you're not
interested," she adds.
Junior Cate Rassman, who plays with Higgins on both the Blair
varsity squad and an off-season Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) team,
has already seen her fair share of recruitment tactics. Although
she is not 100 percent sure she will play varsity basketball in
college, Rassman would prefer a Division I or II school such as
Boston University, Penn State or the University of Delaware.
Rassman received her first batch of recruitment letters after she
and her AAU team played in a college exposure tournament during
the summer of 2004, where there would often be 50 college coaches
at one game. "All the letters said, 'We saw you play, we think you
have potential and we're interested,'" she says. Many of the
letters continue to pour in from Liberty University in Lynchburg,
Virginia, from which Rassman has come to expect unconventional
mail ranging from comic strips featuring the girls on the team to
holiday-themed letters. "They sent me a Valentine, a Thanksgiving
thing," Rassman recounts with a laugh.
Ray Lauenstein, founder of "The
Athlete's Advisor," a web site and publishing company based
out of Boston, and author of "Baseball:
Playing Outside the Lines: A guide to the college
baseball recruiting process", and recruiting guide "The
Making of a Student Athlete" feels that some coaches have
become too aggressive in their recruitment tactics, especially
with star players. "Technology has enabled coaches to stay in
better touch with athletes and vice versa," he explains. "Due to
coaches climbing the ladder or the university wanting better
results faster, there is more pressure to win."
Strict NCAA rules exist to govern when and how coaches and student
athletes can interact, so coaches must be creative in order to
find loopholes and communicate with players. For example, coaches
are allowed to contact an athlete in person and off the college
campus only on or after July 1 following the athlete's junior
year. Rassman remembers one coach who got around this rule by
walking very slowly by one of her AAU teammates, showing off the
college logo on his polo shirt and winking deliberately at the
teammate.
Is it really worth it?
With so much competition and so many obstacles standing in the way
of a student athlete and his or her dream school, the prospect of
spending four grueling years juggling practice, games, academics
and a social life can seem daunting, particularly considering the
small percentage of student athletes who go on to play
professionally. According to Lauenstein, the odds of a high school
football player making it to the pros are about 6,000 to one, and
the odds for a high school basketball player going pro are about
10,000 to one.
Lauenstein believes that the chance to play for a college team is
plenty of incentive for a student athlete to navigate the ins and
outs of the recruiting process and then to work hard in college.
"You learn so much about yourself and how the world works by being
part of a team, striving to reach goals, experiencing major
emotional highs and lows, that you can't even compare it to
anything a classroom would teach you," he says.
Lauenstein also feels that varsity sports can give some student
athletes the drive to work hard in college. "Most athletes do well
academically in season when they are more focused. If they suffer,
it is usually in an offseason," he says.
Graduation rates, which the NCAA requires universities to show to
prospective athletes at least one day before they sign a National
Letter of Intent (a contract which applies to all Division I and
II schools and requires the student athlete to attend the
university for one academic year), support the idea
that athletes are at least no less likely to drop out of school
early than regular students. According to http://www.NCAA.com, 60
percent of all freshmen entering Division I schools during the
1997-1998 school year graduated within six years, while 62 percent
of all students receiving some form of athletic aid did the same.
The tenacity of many student athletes in getting exposure for
themselves is further evidence that the recruitment process is
worth the effort for many. Rassman, who is planning to send out
tapes to schools she is interested in, has teammates who are
trying, sometimes too hard, to be recruited. "I know girls who
tape every game, even ones against bad teams to make themselves
look good," she says. "They will go up to [college] coaches and
talk to them, which isn't allowed. That puts the coach in an
awkward position."
Senior Jack Eisen-Markowitz, a three-year varsity soccer player
who was accepted early decision to Emory University in Atlanta, a
high-level Division III school, found that letting schools he was
interested in know about him was necessary, as most of the
recruitment letters he received were from schools he "had never
heard of." "In general, unless you're amazing at soccer, you have
to initiate contact," he says. Eisen-Markowitz sent Emory a tape
of himself playing, since none of his club team's tournaments
brought him close enough to Atlanta for a coach to watch him in
action.
In addition to enthusiasm and athletic ability, thorough knowledge
of the recruiting process and one's educational and athletic goals
are important for players who want to secure a position at a
school where they will be happy, says Lauenstein.
Lauenstein feels that the biggest mistakes student athletes make
are not being proactive in contacting coaches at schools they are
interested in, starting too late in the recruiting process,
forgetting to find a well-rounded college match with strong
academics and athletics and listening to advice from the wrong
people. "Ultimately, most people are happy where they feel the
most comfortable. That is something only they can judge," says
Lauenstein.
Hopefully, come signing day, both Rassman and Higgins will find
schools where they are comfortable and where they can reach their
athletic potential while learning and enjoying college life, as
Eisen-Markowitz has. Perhaps, amid those piles of recruitment
letters, there is one from such a golden match.
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Ray Lauenstein is the author of
Baseball: Playing Outside the Lines and
The Making of a Student
Athlete. He also holds a Masters Degree in Sport Psychology and gives
seminars on Mental Skills Training and the Recruiting Process. If you
would like him to speak to your team, booster club or other group please
contact him via the online form or call
1-617-835-1836.
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