Recruiting Time Line
Reproduced by permission of Bob Howdeshell (High
School Baseball Web) and modified for volleyball by Jennie
Gilbert (Former Tennessee Tech Head Coach)
Freshman (9th grade)
Settle into the high school
environment. Get to work developing
good classroom and home study habits. Learn to manage your
time.
Work hard on the junior high/high
school team. Try to stay after with the coach to learn new
skills or perfect basics.
Play the best and most competitive
spring/summer club volleyball that is available to you. Play
with the best teams, at the best tournaments, against the best
competition possible.
Attend a comprehensive
college summer camp.
Sophomore (10th grade)
Continue to "hit the books" hard.
You’ve probably heard it before, but it is very true. Your
athletic ability means nothing if you can’t do the class work!
If you can’t qualify for college academically, your talent and
efforts will be wasted.
Meet with your high school guidance
counselor -- tell him/her of your desire to play college
volleyball. You want to be "on track" with the NCAA required
core courses.
Play as much
club volleyball as possible ... the more you play, the more
experience that you will get…and the more you should improve.
Attend as many college
summer camps as you can afford. This gives you a chance to
learn new techniques, see different coaching styles and see many
campuses. You will begin to find what things are important to
you in a future school.
Send out your
first contact letters – include your club schedule and your
junior year high school schedule. College coaches are not
permitted to write back yet except to notify you they received
your letter and to invite you to their summer camp. But you will
get your name out in front of the coaches you want to play for.
Plan
official visit!
Junior (11th grade)
Ask your high school coach to write
letters to a few preferred colleges.Include a copy of your fall
schedule.
SEPTEMBER 1st - Coaches are
permitted to send letters in writing!
Register with the
NCAA Initial - Eligibility Clearinghouse (your high school
guidance counselor should have these forms).
Register for the fall
ACT / SAT standardized tests. Most students take these tests
at least twice. Try to schedule a winter date that won’t
conflict with high school or club season. Request that your
ACT/SAT
test scores be sent to the NCAA Clearinghouse (there is a box on
the application form that you check for this).
Prepare a
videotape to be sent out when requested. Ask for help from
club coaches, parents, and club teammates.
Continue club ball – but be selfish!
If college ball is your ultimate goal, you need to play on a
team with a lot of exposure. You could be the star on a local
team, but if your club only attends a few regional tournaments,
the college coaches won’t see you! “Play” is the other concern.
If you are on the club’s number one team, but never play, you
won’t be noticed. Ask to move to the #2 team where you can
compete more often. As difficult as it may be, moving to another
club can help you get the exposure you want.
Focus this summer should be on
attending "Select” or “Advanced" or “Elite” camps. In this
environment you will be able to gauge yourself against some of
the best players, at each camp. The college coaches will be able
to do the same.
JULY 1st -
Phone contact from college coaches is permissible.
Senior (12th grade)
DO NOT LET UP ACADEMICALLY!
It’s easy to catch senioritis – but it may cost you your
eligibility.
Review core academic requirements
with your guidance counselor. Make sure you are "on track."
Send out your fall schedule.
The first day of class for your
senior year is the first day you may attend an
official visit. If you haven’t already verbally committed,
take those visits ASAP! If you are offered an official visit --
prepare for your visit with a list of questions written down.
(You’ll be amazed how nervous you will get – and you’ll forget
what you wanted to ask!) Be prepared for any questions the
college may have for you.
Early signing period -- dates vary slightly from year to
year -- Check on the
NCAA website for the current years dates.
You can contact college coaches (by
phone) at any time (prior to July after your Junior year they
can not call you).
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