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Early recruiting popular but risky for young players


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4 minutes ago, Tigers2010 said:

It is risky if you commit as a freshman or sophomore and shut your recruitment process down. I would say commit when you want, but keep your recruitment open and continue the process. 

That's a big problem with college baseball recruiting right now. Once a kid commits, his recruiting process typically shuts down. Usually other coaches won't look too much into a hard freshman or sophomore commit.

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12 minutes ago, Ty Cobb said:

Very good information in that article.  I wish the NCAA/college's were forced to send this information to every recruit as soon as the recruiting process begins.  I see no positive, for the recruit, in early verbal commitments.

Another thing I mentioned - and that you touched on - is that there's no system for educating players and families on the process. Most are going through it for the first time so are naturally naive about the risks.

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Very good article will some valid points. As mentioned above, most people have no idea on how the process actually works (I know I didn't until it happened and we learned along the way) until they go through it. It is very one-sided with the colleges having most if not all the leverage with the kids. And the comment of the other colleges not looking at them once they have a verbal is 100% accurate. I think the 11.7 scholarships is one of the most important points of the article, as we have discussed on this forum a few different times. One last thing that really  jumped out to me is seeing that only approximately 11% of all HS players will have a chance to play at the next level (D1, JUCO ,D2 or D3) and only approximately 2% of HS kids will play at the D1 level. 

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Take this for what it’s worth to you:  committing early is not good in my opinion strictly because at 12-15, you may be fully developed and the field will catch up with you.  You also might not know what Juco kids signs to fill a spot the year before you sign or another high school kid blossoms a year before you can legally sign.  I know a lot of college head coaches and they have the final say, not the recruiter at the showcase tournaments.  Also, don’t just look D-1 because the numbers are pretty right when you 1 out of 11 might play in college and probably 2 per year in golden triangle will play D-1 on yearly average.  If you wanna play the game and not just be on a team, be honest with yourself and go where you can play everyday.  I watch a lot of juco and D-2 games and it’s good baseball and both have scholarships to offer. 

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