Each year, thousands of college-hopeful sports careers come to an end prematurely due to the common mistakes made by athletes and their parents. It doesn’t have to be your story though. Here are five pitfalls to avoid.
While they can be helpful, it is not their job to do. Sure, that would make things easy, but the job is yours, not theirs. It’s your college career hanging in the balance, not theirs.
It’s the default strategy that will put you behind in the process, leaving much to chance. While others are creating advantages, those who wait compromise opportunity.
While expensive sporting events and club teams may add experience and lifetime memories, they offer no automatic recruiting benefit unless you create it.
“I sent an email to the coach and he didn’t respond.” It takes a lot more than just an email or two to go from prospect to recruit. It takes persistence and diligence to get the coach’s interest and attention.
Finding a real opportunity for playing college sports begins with being proactive in identifying the right colleges and having a strategy for admissions and athletic recruiting. It’s a dual-path process.
One day for everyone, high school will come to an end and with it, many aspiring athletic careers.
It’s up to you to bridge the gap between the definitive ending of high school sports and the definitive beginning of a college sports opportunity.
Looking for more training on this topic? Learn the College Recruiting Formula
Hans Hanson has worked as a College Advisor for 15 years and has published articles in such places as US News and Forbes.