Anonymous wrote:NP here. This is my oldest child so we have never gone through college recruiting. DC is going through preread at 3 nescac colleges, and all coaches have been positive throughout the process but one in particular (the one at the college with highest admit rate of the 3) already has expressed confidence in the preread outcome and a desire for DC to visit in the fall and stay with team members, go to practice, etc. That coach just reached back out to set up a call to discuss preread results. It is possible that the coach may extend an “offer” (not sure if that term is used), or express desire to use “supported slot” or whatever the term is to my child, and I want my child to be prepared what to say in response. DC likes all 3 colleges (and greatly desires to go to a college where they can play their sport), but is not close to decided among the 3 colleges so would not be prepared to tell the coach they are committed back. Of course the coaches must be used to this, but I’d love advice for how DC can respectfully say to the coach to express appreciation, strong interest in the college but not commit to attend said college at least at this point (at a minimum DC will want to hear back from the other 2 colleges they are in discussions with). Thanks very much for all advice here! DC has been navigating this all solo but I think this is the time for a little
advice from parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it common for HS and Club coaches to advocate to D3 coaches on behalf of players?
IIt depends on the HS / club, but yes - it's fairly common. However, in D3 recruiting the DC has to self initiate the contact with the coaches and self advocate. The club ( mostly) and HS is the platform used for coaches to evaluate your DC (as your DC initiates contact), not necessarily the communication arm. Don't depend on the club / HS coach to do this for your DC: your DC - with background family help - should do the vast majority of the outreach.
Anonymous wrote:Is it common for HS and Club coaches to advocate to D3 coaches on behalf of players?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It varies by school, but on average, each sport gets 2 "slots." A D3 school with football would get around 14 slots for that sport. Assuming 23 total sports across women and men - plus football for men - you're talking about 58 total admissions slots, which are pretty firm admissions support.
The process is fluid, and I think coaches can exchange slots. Again, each school and/or conference ( i.e. NESCAC) has its own slot determination/ distribution methodology.
D3 coaches will use the slots for recruited athletes they REALLY want. Other recruits will get "soft" admissions support or "tips." Nothing is guaranteed since admissions make the final call, but if the coach is reputable in what he/she is telling the recruit, you can almost take a slot to the bank. Tips have no admissions advantage. There are more recruits than slots, so there will be some management by the coaches there.
Thank you for this explanation. Is 'soft admissions support' and 'tips' the same?
You're welcome.
Yes they are.
So soft admissions support doesn't give any admissions advantage?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It varies by school, but on average, each sport gets 2 "slots." A D3 school with football would get around 14 slots for that sport. Assuming 23 total sports across women and men - plus football for men - you're talking about 58 total admissions slots, which are pretty firm admissions support.
The process is fluid, and I think coaches can exchange slots. Again, each school and/or conference ( i.e. NESCAC) has its own slot determination/ distribution methodology.
D3 coaches will use the slots for recruited athletes they REALLY want. Other recruits will get "soft" admissions support or "tips." Nothing is guaranteed since admissions make the final call, but if the coach is reputable in what he/she is telling the recruit, you can almost take a slot to the bank. Tips have no admissions advantage. There are more recruits than slots, so there will be some management by the coaches there.
Thank you for this explanation. Is 'soft admissions support' and 'tips' the same?
You're welcome.
Yes they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It varies by school, but on average, each sport gets 2 "slots." A D3 school with football would get around 14 slots for that sport. Assuming 23 total sports across women and men - plus football for men - you're talking about 58 total admissions slots, which are pretty firm admissions support.
The process is fluid, and I think coaches can exchange slots. Again, each school and/or conference ( i.e. NESCAC) has its own slot determination/ distribution methodology.
D3 coaches will use the slots for recruited athletes they REALLY want. Other recruits will get "soft" admissions support or "tips." Nothing is guaranteed since admissions make the final call, but if the coach is reputable in what he/she is telling the recruit, you can almost take a slot to the bank. Tips have no admissions advantage. There are more recruits than slots, so there will be some management by the coaches there.
Thank you for this explanation. Is 'soft admissions support' and 'tips' the same?
Anonymous wrote:What determines how many 'supported admissions slots' are given to a DIII coach? In other words, how is it determined how many athletes Admissions lets the coach give 'hard support' to? Does it change evey year or is it set in stone? Can a coach lobby for an 'extra' spot if s/he feels it's needed?
Anonymous wrote:It varies by school, but on average, each sport gets 2 "slots." A D3 school with football would get around 14 slots for that sport. Assuming 23 total sports across women and men - plus football for men - you're talking about 58 total admissions slots, which are pretty firm admissions support.
The process is fluid, and I think coaches can exchange slots. Again, each school and/or conference ( i.e. NESCAC) has its own slot determination/ distribution methodology.
D3 coaches will use the slots for recruited athletes they REALLY want. Other recruits will get "soft" admissions support or "tips." Nothing is guaranteed since admissions make the final call, but if the coach is reputable in what he/she is telling the recruit, you can almost take a slot to the bank. Tips have no admissions advantage. There are more recruits than slots, so there will be some management by the coaches there.