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Our best advice. Begin your preparations early.
How early? Soccer teams of six year old players are
flooding the fields. Kids so small you can't believe that anyone makes
cleats in their size! But, while six year olds are hesitant in football or
baseball, they instinctively know how to play soccer, and they love
it!
We encourage parents of young children to try every sport
that the kids and their friends enjoy. Partly to try on different sports
... until you find a good fit ... and partly to meet new friends beyond
your own circle. Our garage is a museum of adventures into horseback
riding, baseball, softball, basketball, volley ball, tennis, golf, track,
cross country, swimming and, of course, soccer.
Since 1991 our unique publications have helped student
athletes earn a great education, for the least possible cost, courtesy of
sports like soccer and good grades. The combination of excelling in
school and excelling in a sport is a potent formula for success in the
college admissions process.
Begin early. By high school, when every
grade is permanently recorded on your transcript, A's and B's will have
become a habit. Beginning early works because practice really does make
perfect. Studies confirm that, for all but a gifted few, practice is the
most dependable way to gain skills in the classroom and on the field.
Colleges are shifting investments to sports played by boys
or girls of ordinary stature, low cost/low injury sports and sports that
sell seats in the stadium and in the class room. When Boston University
discontinued its 91 year old football program it was losing $3 million.
Others will follow ... 70% of college football teams lose money.
Pick a good club producing competitive teams that do well at
tournaments. Check with college coaches and speak with parents of players
who were recruited and those who were not. Very few clubs truly understand
the importance of developing both players and coaches. Doing
both well stabilizes the program, unites the parents and gets all the kids
to college ... year after year. If your club can't get it right, cut your
losses early and move to a better program that prepares players for
college opportunities

Kate Gallo and
Susanne Collins
4-time Florida State Champs by age 14.
Begin Early!
Tournaments are a great way to be seen by college
soccer coaches. Study and pick the high profile tournaments listed in our
"Best Tournaments book." Some tournaments that have over 100
college coaches in attendance. Playing well at tournaments is just one
more way to be noticed by college coaches.
Well organized clubs will have a team profile containing
every player name, address, phone number, jersey number, GPA, SAT/ACT
scores and soccer honors (ODP, CAP, club and high school). This
information is important for the college coach. Make it easy for him to
use.
Prepare a profile even if there aren't many Seniors on the
team. College coaches follow Sophomores and Juniors invite them to summer
camp.
Use your participation at tournaments as an early
opportunity to get noticed. Plan ahead ... college coaches do!
Olympic Development (ODP), is one of the best ways
to be seen by college coaches. Many ODP coaches are college coaches who
volunteer their time to help 100,000 players participate each year.
Tryouts are open to club members and are held by birth
year in every state. If you make the team of 25 (18 + 7 alternates) you
are considered one of the best players in the state in your age group, a
very important step in your future.
Your state team then plays teams from other states at the
Regional Camp. The Regional Coaches pick the Regional Team and Regional
pool. Selection means that you are one of 25 best players, in your age, in
a 14 state region and among the 100 best ODP players in the nation.
The Regional team then competes against the other 3
Regional teams. From these teams, the national team and pool are selected
for that age group.
Participation in the ODP has helped many college-minded
players get noticed by college coaches. It's simple economics. A typical
travel budget for a college soccer coach is only $3,000 per year, so it is
essential that colleges recruit where the highest concentration of good
players are found. That means ODP Regional tournament, club regionals and
those tournaments reviewed in our Best Tournaments book are
good places to be seen by recruiting college coaches.
CAP, the new College Athlete Program from
AYSO offers an innovative player evaluation and training system
that produces well rounded and qualified student athletes for college
opportunities.
Just two years old, the program includes standardized
testing and extensive written player evaluations to guide players and
develop college level skills. Participants receive valuable seminars in
preparing for college opportunities and a subscription to our Student
Athlete magazine.
Open to both USYSA and AYSO players, CAP enrollment
tripled last year, all college-minded players should attend this
outstanding program. One day "auditions" are offered in most
states. Call 800-506-7257for info.
Summer Soccer Camps ... A great way to "try on
the college you may someday play for. Student Athlete magazine, has been
called the Consumer Reports of college-bound soccer. Our Special
Camper’s issues, recommend college affiliated camps. We do our homework.
All recommended camps are good ... but quality training is only half of a
camp’s value to you. As parents of serious young soccer players, we know
how important, camp selection is, for the college-minded player. Three
most important things to do, to increase your chances of playing college
soccer, are:
1. Participate in the ODP or CAP
2. Win state cup with your club team
3. Attend camp at the college where you hope to play
Can you be certain your club team will win the state
championship ... or if you will make the ODP team ... or if your favorite
college coach is watching at the tournament when you make the move of your
soccer career? Of course not.
But, if your favorite college operates a camp, use it to
"try on" coach, campus, dorm, and food ... for nearly four days
... and help your college selection process, too.
By the end of camp, both you and the coach will know if
his college should be in your future. If it’s just not a good fit, ask
him to suggest other colleges and to act as your reference.
Camps are important to college coaches. Competitive
players make the camp a success, elevate the level of play, and challenge
other players. They stimulate the coaching staff, too. Everyone learns
more and has more fun.
Many college coaches prefer to recruit players they have
had the opportunity to observe and "try on" under game-like
conditions at summer camp.
Indiana University's Head Coach, Jerry Yeagley, 1998
Men’s Div. I National Champs, says, "Our campers get a feel for
university life and the IU soccer program; this helps them evaluate us.
Meanwhile, coaches are evaluating campers in an intense week of training;
it's an important part of our recruiting process, and many potential
players have been identified in their way.
Coach
Jerry Yeagley
"Mark Berson,
Head Men’s coach at the U. of South Carolina, says, "Over the
duration of a camp, the coaches get to know the campers and the campers
get to know the coaches and the environment. This is a huge bonus for both
in the recruiting process."
Soccer resumes and cover letters are important to
establish yourself as interested in attending his school. Unfortunately,
there are a lot of good players writing bad soccer resumes and hurting
their own chances.
Make your cover letter personalized with coach's name on
the letter. Tell him why you want to go to his school, what you want to
study and why you want to play for him. Show the coach that you are
familiar with the school. If you can change the name of the coach to send
the letter to another school, then the letter isn't good enough.
Your resume includes your position(s), year of graduation,
GPA and SAT/ACT scores, ODP, CAP, club and high school experience. On a
separate page include several references, at least two of whom are college
coaches or coaches he will know. Notify your references, so they will
expect the coach's call.
If you're good in another sport, like track or cross
country include your fastest times in events that you ran. If you were
Captain of the volleyball team, or all-conference in another sport, say
so. Type everything in a large font and don't clutter the resume with
information not pertinent to your selection as a student athlete. Paste a
color photo in the resume's upper right hand corner.
Send a video only as a last resort. No player has
ever received a scholarship from a video alone. College coaches must see
you play. Send them a bad video, and you can be sure they will never come.
But if you begin early, targeting only a handful of
"best fit" schools where they will want you to play, and recruit
the college coaches at tournaments, summer camps and ODP or CAP, you'll
never need a video. If, like one of our subscribers, the Governor of
Alaska, you have a REAL distance problem, use our "How To
Produce a Video" pamphlet to present the player in the best possible
setting.
Recruiting services are a waste of money.
College coaches want to hear directly from players or parents who are
genuinely interested in their programs. Save your money, then go
visit the campus, see the team play and meet the coach.
Time for a
REALITY CHECK.
Think about what college coaches want.
Every college coach needs to find student athletes who want to play for
him, want to attend his college, and are both athletically and
academically qualified to do so. Please read that sentence again.
Now rank your 20 "best fit"
colleges by their soccer performance (our "Winning Your
Scholarship" book has the win/loss data you need) with the best at
the top and worst at the bottom.
Remember, you selected each these "best
fit" colleges, so you could be happy at any of them. Now concentrate
on those in the middle of your ranking. Why? Because those schools do not
have a top soccer program ... but, of course, would like to have one ...
and that is why they will want YOU.
By focusing on a few "best
fit" colleges, you have done a large part of the coach's job for him
... so he is very happy to meet you. It's so simple ... just go where they
want you. It works.
If you found this article useful,
please subscribe to our magazine, the Student Athlete, and purchase our 3
books, 18 pamphlets and video which comprise our College Scholarships SYSTEM
that has helped over 10,000 players. All are available at: http://www.student-athlete.net
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