College Soccer:
Advice from College Soccer Perrone Ford
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As a
coach of both college and older age group youth teams, I am
often asked by parents and player how to best get seen by
college coaches and how to win scholarships. I thought I might
share with the list a posting I wrote for them as it might help
your players.
This past weekend, I had my first official college
recruiting trip. I went to the CASL (Raleigh) Shootout. For
those of you who have been, you know what kind of event this is,
but for those of you who have never attended such an event, I
will tell you that it is something that will change your life as
a soccer player.
I thought I might offer some words of advice to those
of you seeking wisdom on how to make yourself more presentable
to college coaches, and how to help yourself get a college
scholarship.
- Be realistic.
You need to have very realistic impressions of how good a
player you are, and what your chances are of playing in
college. Those of you who are playing on TOP soccer teams
generally know you are. Here I am talking about Colorado Rush,
San Diego Surf, Texas Challenge, Ohio Premier, Busch SC, etc.
The opportunity for you to realize your dreams of playing at a
very high college level are quite good, but certainly not
guaranteed. Those playing for smaller or less strong clubs
really are going to have to
take a hard look at where you want to play.
- Focus on your education.
The number of female soccer players who earn a
living after college in the sport is incredibly small. This
means that when you graduate, you will need to have a good
education. Select a school where
you can do well. If you go to a high school that is in a small
town and has 15 people in a class, don't assume that if you go
to a large school like Ohio State or Florida state, and you
have 500 people in your freshman
biology class, that you will do well. If you go to school in
the northeast, is moving to the desert southwest REALLY a
smart thing? Don't pick your
school based on soccer alone.
- Work at your grades and
test scores.
Believe it or not, college coaches will usually look at
your GPA, class rank, and SAT/ACT scores before they watch you
play. The better your grades, and the better your test scores,
the more attractive you are to most college coaches. This
doesn't mean you need to be on the Dean's list to get into
your school (usually) but it means that
the college coach will have to spend less money on your
scholarship which greatly increases your chances of getting to
play where you'd like to play.
- Have a complete set of
fundamentals before you ask a coach to come watch you.
If you want to play striker at a large school, you need to
be able to receive, turn and shoot under pressure and at match
speed. With both feet. Your shots need to be on target and
strong enough to beat a good goalkeeper. College coaches are
not looking for players to sit the bench. They are looking for
players who can come right out of high school and start. This
is how teams get better. So when you watch UNC or Stanford,
and you decide that
is where you want to play, you must ask yourself honestly if
you could step on that field and be better than at least 5-7
of the girls starting. If not, you need to get better, or
choose another school where you will have a better chance.
- Contact schools early.
When you are a Junior, and you begin selecting
schools, send emails to the coaches at the schools you are
interested in. This is especially important if the school is
some distance away. Most colleges have very tight budgets and
coaches must decide quite early who they are going to go see.
Quite often coaches will recruit at a few specific tournaments
and that will be all. They will generally go to the largest
tournament in their home state, and 2-3 national tournaments
like WAGS,
Raleigh Shootout, Orange Classic, Dallas Cup, USA Cup, Surf
Cup, etc. If you want to get seen by larger schools, you need
to get yourself to these tournaments.
- When you make your college
profile, include your intended major AND the size of school
you are interested in.
If you've decided that you don't want
more than 20 kids in your classes with you, don't call up UF
or Portland.
- Don't be afraid of smaller
schools.
If you are a good player, don't ignore smaller schools.
Very often small schools will make very generous offers to
strong players. Many players who would only get small
scholarships at large schools and limited playing time, would
often be able to a attend school for free, or very cheaply. If
you are a senior and an ODP state player or Region player,
call a few small schools in your state and see what they have
to offer. Quite often you'll find they will bend over
backwards to have you, and the team will appreciate having
you. Many smaller schools play larger schools anyway so the
level of competition if often quite similar.
- Keep your parents involved
at every step.
The most important relationship in the life of scholarship
athlete is the one between your parents and the coach. When
your parents and the coach have a good relationship, it
usually benefits everyone. Your parents can talk to college
coaches on your behalf (during the legal time periods), and
can smooth the way for you to be able
to play at the schools of your choice.
- Be polite.
If you've written a school and you ask them to come see you
play and they do, be thankful. Nothing turns off a college
coach faster than having a player ignore or disregard them.
You don't have to fawn all over the coach, but let them know
you appreciate the effort they put into coming to see you. In
my own case, I spent several hundred dollars (of my own money)
to go watch 5 players. I left my home at 4am, worked 18 hours
on Saturday, 8 hours Sunday, and got home at 11pm. Each player
I spoke with was very polite and thankful. Those players may
not come to my school, but I
appreciated them listening to what I had to say and acting
interested. Send thank you letters if a coach comes to see
you. The coach will potentially spend tens of thousands of
dollars on you. Let them know that you are willing to spend 35
cents on a letter to say thanks.
- Be happy with what you get.
If you do your research and find out that a school is the
right place for you to play then go there and enjoy it to the
best of your ability. Don't go and be angry that you maybe
didn't get into your first choice school. If you are a good
player your teammates may resent you feeling that way because
maybe that was their first choice. If your school doesn't have
a shoe contract, or only buys uniforms every other year
instead of every year like your club might, don't get angry.
Be thankful and remember that there are over 20,000 girls
every year who never even get selected by ANY college and
never get to realize their dream of playing at the next level.
If you find that you don't like the coach or you can't stand
your teammates, don't blame the coach. It's up to you to do
the research on the school, spend time with the coach, meet
some players, and ask the right questions before you accept
the school offer.
- FINISH SCHOOL.
Even if you don't play soccer, you are there to get a
degree. Do that much. If you have to transfer to another
school to finish school, then do so, but make sure you finish
school.
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I hope
this helps some of you out there who are looking to play at
college, or parents if you are looking to help your kids get
into college. If you have questions about this stuff email me
privately, and I'll try to answer your questions honestly and
openly. Please don't ask me about getting a scholarship to my
school. I won't answer those questions. If you contact my
school for an offer in a official way, I'll be more than glad to
help out.
Perrone Ford
perroneford@YAHOO.COM
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Note:
On the Soccer-Coach-L e-mail list another coach added the
following:
Any one of the four factors below will make the athlete's
financial package "Free" to the athletic department so that (in
effect) the athlete won't count against the magic 9.9
scholarship equivalents and really boost the player's odds of
getting a college scholarship.
- Top 10% of class
- Cumulative NCAA ACT of 105
- SAT of 1200
- 3.5 in the NCAA "core courses"
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