Archive for the ‘College Wrestling’ Category
August 21st, 2008 - by Keith Babb
Among the many reasons to enter the college sports recruiting process earning an athletic scholarship to pay for college is always at the top of the list. Playing in college offsets the burden of paying for college. After all, who wants to be paying for college 10 years after they graduate because of student loans? In May 2007, testimony before US congress revealed that a quarter of all students graduate with too much debt to pay back on a starting teachers salary. That is way too high.
If that’s the case, shouldn’t you be knowledgeable in the ways of Financial Aid?
I earned my MBA from one of the top business schools in the country and traded sophisticated financial instruments for over 20 years. I thought I could figure this financial aid thing out. I couldn’t. I needed help. I’m very glad I invested in professional advice that helped maximize the grants and scholarships my daughter received. One of the great things about NCSA is that their advice on how to maximize scholarship dollars actually works. And it continues to work. Except for the less than 1% of college athletes who have “full rides” (tuition, books, room & board, fees, transportation), most families must negotiate their financial aid package on an annual basis. Paying for that expert advice helped - a lot! As she enters her junior year, my daughter has received over $135,000 in financial aid. Not one penny of that is a student loan. It’s all grants that don’t have to be paid back. Do you think I’m happy with the professional advice I received? My return on that investment was over 6700.00 per cent!
Tags: UCLA Baseball
Posted in Athletic Scholarships, Camps and Combines, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Division II, Division III, Early Signing, Financial Aid, High School Coach, NAIA, NCAA, Parents, The Recruiting Wire | No Comments »
August 20th, 2008 - by Charlie Adams
In 23 years as a sportscaster at TV stations across the country, I covered hundreds and hundreds of recruiting stories. I was able to have the access to college coaches to learn all the things they look for in a prospective student-athlete.
I once sat down with a highly successful college basketball coach at the NAIA level and asked him what he looks for when he is in the stands at a prospect’s games. I was interested in learning what he looks for besides athleticism.
He said he closely watches how the athlete reacts when he is
substituted for in the game. Does he appear miffed about being taken out? Does he actively cheer for the team on the floor or does he just sit there. While in the game, the coach looks for how the athlete reacts when he makes a bad play. Does he hang his head or immediately put the play behind him and give his best to make a positive play. The college coach said he makes notes on all those things and anything else that would possibly impact the chemistry on the college program. The successful college coach had built his program on chemistry and character. Though he needed good athletes, he was very careful about who he let into his program.
Another time I was talking to a college coach about what he does while watching from the stands. The coach said he stays in the bleachers long after the game. He waits until the athlete is showered. He wants to see how the athlete interacts with the parents. He said one time he had checked out a recruit who was fine academically, athletically and seemed to be fine character-wise. The coach watched from the top of the bleachers as the athlete left the locker room. The proud parents were beaming and couldn’t wait to hug and congratulate their child. The athlete brushed right by his parents. Whether he thought it wasn’t cool to hug his parents or whatever, he glided right past them. The college coach told me he terminated recruitment of that kid right away. That may seem a little harsh, but some college coaches mean business when it comes to character. Part of character is honoring your parents. It is one of the Ten Commandments. That college coach was very serious about signing kids that showed respect at all times to elders and especially their own parents.
I hope these examples help remind you that college coaches are looking at a lot more things than how well you kick a soccer ball, dive into a pool, or chase down an elusive tailback. They’re watching your character because they are watching out for their own team chemistry.
Posted in College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Volleyball, College Wrestling | 1 Comment »
August 19th, 2008 - by Keith Babb
Do you think the college athletic recruiting process should provide you with the highest number of opportunities? Do you think understanding college athletics recruiting can reveal the perfect college fit for you? How do you go about increasing your opportunities? What system should you employ to make sure you are selecting the right opportunity for you?
College coaches begin by initially contacting 1,000 or 2,000 or even 10,000 (depending on the sport) student athletes by sending them camp brochures, emails, questionnaires, etc. Those same college coaches are clearly not recruiting all of those student-athletes. Why do they start with such a large pool? They are following the advice of Marketing 101: the more kids who they find out about, the better chance they’ll find the really quality student-athlete who will help their program. If that’s a good strategy for college coaches, shouldn’t a student-athlete use the same strategy? Doing so will increase your number of opportunities.
A savvy student-athlete will learn as early as freshman year that they need to develop trust-based relationships with college coaches. This can only happen through communication. Since the NCAA restricts the amount and timing of contacts initiated by college coaches, the student-athlete must be proactive. Unfortunately, the 14 or 15 year old student-athlete doesn’t have the life experiences or the maturity to begin building relationships with adults. The good news is they can be trained in that skill set. It’s like interviewing for a job.
College recruiting boils down to trust-based relationships between college coaches and student-athletes. What college coach is going to make a significant investment in a student-athlete unless they know a lot more about that student-athlete than her/his performance on the playing field?
If you agree with playing the numbers game and building trust-based relationships with college coaches, have you thought about how you would do that? If you’re a student-athlete reading this, do you think your parents can do this for you? If so, you better forget about playing sports in college. Do you think your coach can do this for you? Again, if so, you better forget about finding the perfect college fit for you. You are the one that needs to take charge. You can only do that if you develop the skill set to do so. Who will teach you that?
Finally, if you do all of the above correctly, how do you determine the right fit? There are many different factors including: academic quality of the school, size of school, location of school, financial aid package, level of competition, opportunity to play early, getting along with the coaching staff and players, receiving tutoring help (if necessary), etc. There is a way to logically sort out all of those factors. If you need help, go here.
Posted in Athletic Scholarships, Camps and Combines, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Communication, Contacting Coaches, Division II, Division III, Early Signing, Financial Aid, High School Coach, Parents, Restrictions, The Recruiting Wire, Transfers, Visits | 1 Comment »
August 14th, 2008 - by NCSA Sports
That someone is Swedish wrestler Ara Abrahamian. After losing to the eventual gold medal winner Andrea Minguzzi of Italy in the semi-finals of the 84 kilogram Greco-Roman wrestling, Abrahamian threw a hissy-fit, shouting at the referee and officials, and stormed off. From Douglas Hamilton’s article on Yahoo! Sports:
Swedish fans booed loudly as the judges filed out of the arena. Abrahamian said nothing to waiting reporters but whacked an aluminium barricade with his fist as he left the hall.
The Swedes were more than likely booing the judges, but those boos probably should’ve been for their own contryman for reacting like he did. To make matters worse, Abrahamian had to be persuaded by friends to wrestle for the bronze (which he won), and at the medal ceremony, he received the bronze medal, shook the presenter’s hand, shook Minguzzi’s hand, stepped off the podium, walked to the center of the mat, dropped his bronze medal and left the building.
And then he quit the sport.
“This will be my last match. I wanted to take gold, so I consider this Olympics a failure,” he said.
Kids, don’t try this at home.
Sometimes, things don’t go your way. You can’t win every bout, every set, every match, every game. Rather than pout that things didn’t go your way, you need to grow from those setbacks and become not just better at your sport, but a better person.
Michael Jordan for example. He didn’t make his high school’s varsity team when he first tried out. But look what happened to him.
Your mistakes only make you stronger.
“I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions, I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot… and missed. And I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why… I succeed. ” - Michael Jordan
Posted in College Wrestling | No Comments »
August 11th, 2008 - by Brian Davidson
Character matters in recruiting. When I ask a coach in any sport what they look for in a recruit the words high character always come up in their top three. Taking a chance on a “risky” recruit can often come back to bite a coach in the butt.
In 2007 Texas threw former high profile recruit Robert Joseph off the team for getting caught breaking into cars at a hotel parking lot. The incident drew a ton of heat for the school, administration and football staff. To make matters even worse it came to light that Joseph had a felony record when he came to Texas, but it went undetected by the coaching staff since his juvenile record was sealed. This was simply a case of the details slipping through the cracks.
Today’s Austin American Statesman discusses with Texas Head Coach Mack Brown the steps he uses to make sure that no other details fall through the cracks.
“First, we look at the kid,” Brown said. “If they’ve got good values in their family and they tell you the truth, they call you when they’re supposed to, they show up when they’re supposed to, they e-mail back when you e-mail them and they’ve done things for the school and leadership with the community - they’re responsible. Those are no-brainers, but that makes sense.”
Then it’s on to the next phase: talking to a recruit’s parents.
“We prefer kids from two-parent families because they tend to be more stable,” Brown said. “More recently, we’ve accepted kids from one-parent families because half the kids come from those homes. Now our rule is that there has to be one strong parent as a role model.
“If we have trouble with the parents, we don’t recruit the kid.”
The Longhorns also look at grade-point averages, preferring players with a 3.0 or better, depending on the school. And they look at test scores to make sure the scores are in line with the recruit’s grades.
“If he’s got a high test score and low grades, it means he hasn’t really been working as hard and isn’t putting as much effort into school,” Brown said. “That’s a red flag.”
They look at confidence. “A confident kid is going to have success and isn’t as prone to falling into something because of peer pressure,” Brown said.
They look to see if a player has transferred schools.
Next, it’s on to coaches.
“It’s not just about the head coach,” Texas A&M recruiting coordinator Tim Cassidy said. “You’ve got to talk to the assistant coaches, coaches of their opponents. The coaches of the opponent might not know as much about character, but they’re good to talk to. The more people you talk to, the more you know the kid you’re recruiting.”
If you want to make it to the highest level of your recruiting potential it is of the upmost importance that you make the right choices to ensure that your character is judged to be of the highest quality.
Posted in College Baseball, College Basketball, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Hockey, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, High School Coach | 3 Comments »
August 10th, 2008 - by Keith Babb
Are you a student-athlete who is on a mission to play college sports? Are you a student-athlete who has played your sport for years? Imagine your first sport season after high school and you’re not playing. What would that feel like?
Most student athletes and their families are unaware of how early college recruiting begins. Or the reasons it begins so early. The problem is that 93% of high school students who go on to college are applying through the academic door. They begin researching colleges late in their junior year or early in their senior year. They listen to the high school guidance counselor who advises them to apply to several schools. They place these schools into 3 categories: 1) Reach schools (if I’m lucky, I’ll get in.) 2) Stretch schools (I’m pretty sure I’d get accepted to half of these I apply to.) and 3) safe schools (I’ll get in no matter what.) Make sure you have all of your applications in before Christmas break.
Unfortunately, student-athletes and their families think that college athletic recruiting operates along the same time-line. It doesn’t! If you wish to apply through the athletic door, you need to understand the different calendars and timelines.
Different sports have different recruiting calendars and time-lines. However, all sports have the following in common:
- College coaches would love to find out about you early. In some sports that’s as early as 7th and 8th grade, other sports it’s by 10th grade. Waiting until the beginning of junior year begins to reduce your opportunities.
- A college student athlete has a certain athletic profile. For example, in baseball, a student athlete needs to have a certain 60-yard dash time, a certain overhand throwing velocity, a certain bat-speed, etc. For very competitive schools, those metrics need to be achieved by the end of junior year. If not, many college coaches will refuse to evaluate a student-athlete. It takes time to develop physically and student-athletes need to train to that level early to ensure they reach that level on time.
- College coaches only give scholarship money to student-athletes they know, like, and trust. Those trust-based relationships take time to build. Because of the recruiting restrictions placed on college coaches, it’s important that a student-athlete begin to build those relationships as a freshman. Most don’t know how to go about that.
If you’re serious about being a college student-athlete, you need to implement that game plan that will get you there. Knowing what to do is as important as doing it. If you don’t know what to do, you should contact an expert for an evaluation. You can do that at NCSA.
Posted in Athletic Scholarships, Camps and Combines, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Communication, Contacting Coaches, Division II, Division III, Early Signing, Financial Aid, High School Coach, NCAA, Parents, Visits | 2 Comments »
July 9th, 2008 - by Matt Luckett
The Pac-10 Conference is called the “Conference of Champions” for a good reason. In 2007-2008 the conference captured 13 NCAA Team Championships far more then its runner up, Big Ten (5). These 13 championships is one shy of the record 14 set in 1996-1997. The Pac-10 has lead the nation in NCAA Championships 41 of the last 47 years. They also finished second five times in that span.

Tags: UCLA Baseball
Posted in Athletic Scholarships, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Football, College Golf, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Contacting Coaches, NCAA, Parents, The Recruiting Wire, Transfers, Walking On | No Comments »
July 8th, 2008 - by Matt Luckett
The college recruiting experience has many twists and turns. There are many factors that play into recruiting for a student-athlete but one they have control over is doing the research. Every student-athlete’s process is completely unique and different. Doing research on the colleges and the process should be one of the top priorities!
Not only is the Stanford University one of the top academics schools in the country but it is also one of the best athletic programs (Stanford has won 14 consecutive Directors’ Cup). The Stanford baseball program is a regulaly in the College World Series and is a two time National Champion.
The Baseball Assistant Coach Dean Stotz at Stanford talks about the importance of research and choosing a college; “I have been doing this a long time, and if I may be so bold, I would like to help you simplify the process of selecting what college you will attend. First of all, please have respect for the magnitude of this college decision. You will live with this decision THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! This is not a “four year” decision, but a “FORTY YEAR DECISION”. There are no “mulligans”, no “do-overs”. Consider the task as if you are doing the most important research paper of your young life. The title of your research paper is: Where will I attend college? Now, how do you do well on a research paper?–RESEARCH!!!
There are three broad areas of risk in your college decision. You must decide what type of “academic challenge”, what type of “baseball challenge”, and what type of what I call “social challenge” you wish to take on. In Coach Marquess’s and my 31 years we have not graduated 9 people who attended Stanford for four years.” What do you think? Please post a comment on this topic!!
Posted in ACT/SAT, Athletic Scholarships, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Swimming, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Communication, Contacting Coaches, Division II, Early Signing, Financial Aid, High School Coach, NCAA, Parents, Restrictions, Student Athlete Blogs, The Recruiting Wire, Transfers, Walking On | No Comments »
June 26th, 2008 - by NCSA Sports
I just read an article about a student athlete who signed a Letter of Intent to attend Marquette University solely because he wanted to play basketball for the coach there. Unfortunately, the coach took a better job at Indiana. When this happened, the student athlete wanted to get out of his contract, which was completely up to the University if he could or not. It took longer than it should have, but finally the student was released from his contract.
The article went on about how the rule should be changed and the Letter of Intent should not be so binding. If the coach is allowed to leave, the student athlete should be free to leave as well. I agree entirely.
The article was a good article and the issues talked about are definitely prevalent, but the student athlete should have never put himself in that situation in the first place.
What I mean is why choose a school based on the coach. That’s like choosing a car because of its color. You really like it one day but the next day it breaks down and surprise! you are stuck with a useless hunk of pretty metal.
There is so much more that goes into attending a college and playing a sport that going to a school because of one person simply doesn’t make sense. When it comes to the point where you are seriously being recruited, of course the coach is going to seem perfect for you… he/she is telling you everything you want to hear because they want you to go to their school. He/she may run the perfect offense or their past winning record is something you want to continue and be a part of, but the coach didn’t do that all on his own.
He/she had to have the athletic department’s support or even enough pressure on them to make it happen, assistant coaches on board, the right players who are academically eligible, and the list goes on. That is a lot of people that contribute to success that the student athlete is not taking into consideration.
And even if the student athlete takes all of this into consideration and not too much about the school itself, what if they have an injury? Or what if the coach you are so fond of brings in a stud recruit that takes your spot? What if your team has a losing season?
There are so many things that could happen, you want to make sure you like where you are at. Just like a car. You are stuck with that set of wheels for years, if it does not with stand you and your driving habits you can’t return it. So you make sure before you make the investment that it suits you.
Your college decision is one of the most important decisions you will ever make. There is more than the coach you should consider!
The real kicker of the whole story was the student athlete who only wanted to play for this particular coach signed with another team. The coach moved to Indiana and the student athlete signed with Kansas.
Posted in College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling | No Comments »
June 26th, 2008 - by Joseph Curtis
Every year on the center stage of collegiate sports, we hear the story, often told by television announcers, of the touching tale of the courageous walk on. Visions of Rudy instantly come to the forefront as the journey of the underdog warrior starts to unfold. “He was never recruited out of high school by any of the major programs . . .” says the announcer during his crescendo to the game breaking play. “He has waited his whole life for this moment, battling disappointment after rejection.” It is heartwarming. Life is fair again. That could have been me.
There are few stories that compare in nature. There are fewer that compare in occurrence. The closest relative to Rudy would be the 71 year old retired truck driver who on his last few dollars cashed in on millions playing the random pick’m
game at the local gas station. The only difference is, that story happens more frequently!
For the serious competitor, walking on to a collegiate athletic team can be compared to earning a medical degree and then working as a custodian. You both work in a hospital but unlike all of your classmates, you’re not actually doing what you trained so hard to do for so long. Most collegiate athletes have played their sport since before they could remember, years and years, always starting, usually better and often in the spotlight. To cash in a lifetime of hard work and natural talent for a dream that was forged from within a child’s perspective seems foolish.
Take football for example. There are over 800 colleges that offer football as a varsity sport. Most sports fans in this country can name up to fifty. In baseball there are over 1000 colleges that offer the sport. How many can you name? There are numerous opportunities to explore if the desire to actually play exceeds common ignorance and childhood fantasies.
Walk-ons, just like custodians in hospitals, have vastly different experiences than the scholarship players. First, the ceremonial National Letter of Intent signing day - that does not happen. Next, the preferential class scheduling - no. The second, third, or fourth pair of coaches’ eyes watching you to make sure that you’re taken care of - not so much. You are a necessary tool to help the real players practice, rarely taken serious, rarely awarded a scholarship and sparingly shown respect. Rudy was a great film but I hope it is not your story. Below is a short video of how USC treats its potential walk ons. There are a few questionable language choices in this clip so do not watch if you will be offended. USC Walk On Clip
In summary, if you work your entire life to achieve the goal of becoming a college athlete, find a place where you are wanted. Find a school where you will play and make an impact. Go somewhere that will set you up to have a great experience while you earn your degree, an environment that will help provide you with teammates for life. Step outside of your comfort zone and learn all you can of what is out there. You just might find something that is priceless.
Tags: athletic scholarships, Rudy, USC, Walking On
Posted in ACT/SAT, Athletic Scholarships, College Baseball, College Basketball, College Cross Country, College Field Hockey, College Football, College Golf, College Hockey, College Lacrosse, College Soccer, College Softball, College Tennis, College Track & Field, College Volleyball, College Wrestling, Communication, Contacting Coaches, Division II, Early Signing, Financial Aid, High School Coach, Highlight Video, NCAA, Parents, The Recruiting Wire, Transfers, Walking On | 3 Comments »