Anonymous wrote:If you are not aiming to play D1 basketball, the vast majority of D2/D3/NAIA/Juco schools do not seriously recruit players until they are HS juniors (or rising seniors in AAU). They just don't have the resources to do more than adding your name to a database for future reference. So your best course of action until then is to focus on development, not exposure. Become the best player possible. That means finding playing time and a coach who is committed to player development over exposure. Get in the weight room. Use a private skills trainer to supplement if needed.
If all that development results in a player who is a top Varsity contributor (even at lesser known public schools!) in their junior year, then the college coaches at your appropriate level(s) will likely find you, or will be happy to come to evaluate you at HS/AAU games as a junior/rising senior. They won't care if your AAU team isn't winning a certain number of games or isn't on the "right" circuit.
This is good advice. My kid’s development absolutely took off his sophomore year. This was directly related to changing his focus from playing in as many games as possible (e.g. summer college camps with the HS varsity team where he just sat on the bench every day for a week) to spending as many hours as possible in the gym with a trainer and in a small training group the trainer organized.