Anonymous wrote:Put this in another post, but basically you have to understand that there’s significant tiers in D3.
The top D3 academic schools are often recruiting kids who can’t make a P4 roster (or if they did, they would never play a minute) but have offers from less desirable D1. However they have two other key assets:
1. Great grades
2. Rich family (caveat, can also be disadvantaged or first generation)
In particular, the UAA conference is arguably better than Patriot or A10. I am betting in women’s soccer Emory/CWRU/WashU would beat the socks off of AU, Lehigh, GW, St. Bonaventure or Bucknell.
So D3 questions kind of have to be diverted into two camps.
Anonymous wrote:For those with older kids, are any of these websites where they want you to have a profile (and sometimes pay) worth it? I keep getting emails from Stack, NCSA, etc. Is it best to just reach out to the coaches you are interested in and ignore these or do both? Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Ap4bJ43sX/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Educating Parents of HS athletes on the College Recruiting Process
A lot of the educating parents site stuff is outdated for what is going on in college soccer today, or maybe relevant only for girls...
Any expert who advises against ID camps for boys is way off base. That only works if your kid is among the top 1-2%. For most others, ID camps are huge opportunities and always required if you are a middle of the pack MLSN or ECNL player especially now with the roster camps and all the international players (ID camps give you a leg up agains the internationals).
Many D3s have rosters full of players who attended their ID camp. Yes, its a money grab--but it also gives your kid opportunity to form a relationship with the coach and be seen across multiple days. Does it guarantee anything--no, but your odds greatly improve if you do well.
100% correct. For many D3s, they get all their players from a couple local clubs and then their own IDs (plus depending on the school, maybe a few internationals). So it isn't even a money grab, for many of them you aren't getting on the roster if you don't show up for an ID... Nothing money grab about that and they usually are less than a $100.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Ap4bJ43sX/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Educating Parents of HS athletes on the College Recruiting Process
A lot of the educating parents site stuff is outdated for what is going on in college soccer today, or maybe relevant only for girls...
Any expert who advises against ID camps for boys is way off base. That only works if your kid is among the top 1-2%. For most others, ID camps are huge opportunities and always required if you are a middle of the pack MLSN or ECNL player especially now with the roster camps and all the international players (ID camps give you a leg up agains the internationals).
Many D3s have rosters full of players who attended their ID camp. Yes, its a money grab--but it also gives your kid opportunity to form a relationship with the coach and be seen across multiple days. Does it guarantee anything--no, but your odds greatly improve if you do well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Ap4bJ43sX/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Educating Parents of HS athletes on the College Recruiting Process
Anonymous wrote:https://www.facebook.com/share/g/1Ap4bJ43sX/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Anonymous wrote:For those with older kids, are any of these websites where they want you to have a profile (and sometimes pay) worth it? I keep getting emails from Stack, NCSA, etc. Is it best to just reach out to the coaches you are interested in and ignore these or do both? Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:For those with older kids, are any of these websites where they want you to have a profile (and sometimes pay) worth it? I keep getting emails from Stack, NCSA, etc. Is it best to just reach out to the coaches you are interested in and ignore these or do both? Thanks.