Every year, thousands of high school and junior college basketball
players compete to get one of the few basketball scholarships that are
awarded each year. Here are some basketball tips on how to increase your chances of being selected to receive one of those coveted positions.
Talent and Ability
First and foremost, you have to maximize your basketball skill.
Every day you are not getting better, someone else is getting better
than you. You have to work and work to become the best player you can
be. Work on your skills, be in condition and get stronger.
The jump from high school to college is a big jump. Players are
bigger, stronger and more experienced. The game is longer, faster and
more physical than anything you have experienced so far in your career.
Don’t fall into the trap that you are doing enough to get yourself
ready. Without exception, when new college players report for their
first workouts they are surprised at how different it is compared to
high school. Work to be ready.
The Value of Summer Basketball
Basketball recruiting has changed drastically over the last 15 years.
Rules that colleges have to abide by have become more restrictive. The
pressure to get commitments from players has resulted in players
deciding earlier and earlier on what schools they are going to attend.
It is no longer sufficient to be a good player with your high school
team. Your senior year in college has almost become irrelevant! Colleges
need to identify prospects earlier and earlier in their career. Coaches
now go to places where they can identify and evaluate multiple
prospects at one time. The places for that have become AAU tournaments
and high profile “recruiting summer camps.”
AAU (or Amateur Athletic Union) is an organization that sponsors
amateur sporting events. In basketball, they sponsor spring, summer and
fall tournaments in multiple age groups. The age brackets are usually 19
& under, 17 & under, 15 & under, etc. The advantage of that
system is that you can play up a bracket to get in better competition
(a 15 year old can play in a 17 & U tournament but a 17 year cannot
play in a 15 & U tournament). The tournaments are usually played
during “live” college recruiting periods so college recruiters heavily
attend them. If you can find an AAU basketball team in your area and it
is an appropriate age bracket it would be well worth your effort to join
the program.
High profile “recruiting camps” are basketball camps
that are held during the summer that attract high-level players, which
in turn, attract college recruiters. Most of these are private camps,
not camps owned by universities, colleges or high schools. They usually
offer excellent instruction and very competitive games. Call a couple of
colleges and find out what camps they attend to evaluate prospects and make plans to attend.
Summer basketball has become the most significant aspect of
recruiting. At no other time can a college coach go to one spot and
evaluate 300-400 players at one time. If you want to get one of those
scholarships, you have to be where the coaches are.
Be Pro-Active
Don’t wait for a college to find you, go find them. If there are
schools that you are interested in, contact them early, and let them
know of your interest. Visit the campus, invite the coach to come and
see you play. Have your high school coach contact the schools you are
interested in. Be sure they have the information they need to evaluate
you. Things like game schedules, summer schedules, etc. should be sent
to all schools you are interested in. Return all questionnaires and
comply with all the requirements that they have for acceptance to
school.
Take Care of Your Schoolwork
Believe it or not, college coaches want athletes with good grades!
Players in college are “student-athletes.” They attend class, write
papers, and do research. Coaches really don’t like to take chances on
academic risks. Get good grades; take your standardized tests (SATs,
ACTs) as early and as often as possible. Unless you are truly a great
player, coaches will not wait for you.
To get a scholarship, you have to register for the NCAA Initial
Eligibility Clearinghouse. This is the organization that will evaluate
your grades to determine whether or not you are eligible to play. Even
if you are in junior college, they will go back to your high school
grades to determine your eligibility (there are different rules for
“qualifiers” and “non-qualifiers” coming out of high school and junior
college). Take care of your registration as early as possible.
There used to be a saying, “if you can play, they will find you.”
That is NOT true any more!! Being able to play is not enough, now. You
have to be out where the coaches can find you.
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