Posts Tagged for college

College Football Scholarships – Start the Search Now!

The hunt for college football scholarships really picks up come September. College football coaches may begin calling you once per week if you are a Senior and may being sending your recruiting materials if you are a Junior starting September 1st. You on the other hand may call coaches as much as you want.

Many of you will begin to receive letters and phone calls from coaches starting next month. Does this mean you are being recruited for a college football scholarship? Yes and No. The mailing of letters and initial phone calls is just the start to a long exhaustive recruiting season by football coaches. Colleges will mail our thousands of letters and questionnaires to players of every caliber. We have heard of players receiving dozens of letters, but not so much as a phone call after that.

Coaches and especially the Graduate Assistant coaches (each team has two) as tasked with calling up to 100 to 200 players a day. From the coaches perspective they want to start with as large of a recruiting base as possible by contacting literally thousands of players. If you make the inital screening you will be asked to send in a tape for review. Rest assured, all tapes are screened. Coaches can make a decision to see more, pass on you, or place you in a potential pile within minutes.

We have a detailed strategy in our book how to deal with these letters and phone calls to help navigate the recruiting game. It can be hard to tell who is actually interested in you and who is merely making contact to build a base. During the month of August you should be making your initial recruiting list of 50 to 100 schools that match your academic and athletic profile. Begin making contact with coaches in September and mailing out your recruiting packets. The real rush of college football recruiting starts in late October. It is best to make contact early to beat out the thousands of other high school players who want the same college football scholarship.

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Play College Football – The Recruiting Season Starts Now

If you want to play college football, you need to start taking action now. We are not talking about waiting for college coaches to start calling you. Gone are the days when you can have a great game and expect phone calls on Monday. You need to get your athletic profile and game film in front of coaches.

Everyone has started their pre-season practices and the first games are weeks away. Get your athletic profile done now and complete your personal assessment to narrow down at least 50 colleges that you feel are a good fit to earn a football scholarship from.

Make sure you have someone, a family member, friend, your coaches, etc… filming the games and you can get your own copy the day after the game. This is a crucial step that many players neglect to take care of. Coaches are going to be flooded with game tapes in October. Why wait? Beat out the competition and get film into college football coaches hands in September.

While the college season is also in full swing, football coaches devote as much or more time to recruiting than their actual season. Recruiting is the lifeblood of a college team and a coaches career. Make it easy on coaches. Use a simple recruiting plan that outline’s step-by-step actions to take to make their job easy and show them you are the football player that deserves the college football scholarship.

Those football players who earn scholarships are the one’s who take action and compete as hard as they do on the field towards the football scholarship search. Athletes with a better recruiting plan can often beat out more talented athletes because they were better at the recruiting game.

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High School Football Goals – How to Set a Goal For Your Self

As the summer holiday comes to a blissful end it is time again to turn our thoughts and attention to that great sport of football. Football is a challenging sport because of the athletic talent needed and the competitiveness involved. If you are interested in either starting your first football season or training for next year you are going to want to set some goals. This article describes some great ways to not only set appropriate goals, but to achieve those goals. The main things to remember in setting a goal is to first answer the why question and second write them down.

Goal Setting: Answering the Why Question

No goal will be fulfilled completely unless you know the reason behind the goal. Hence it is important to answer the why question. Why are you doing this? Why do you care? Why do you want the benefits of your succeeded goal? Some answers to the why question might be fame, glory, making myself and my team mates proud, a scholarship for college, among others.

The important thing to remember is that every good goal requires effort and sacrifice. It is not easy to stay after school day after day for long practices, giving up Saturdays or mornings for exercise. In order to make a good goal note what changes are going to happen to your lifestyle and decide if that is what you really want. If it is – great we can set some goals. If you are not ready for the sacrifice then either pick another goal that will give you what you want or except the fact that you might be a mediocre player.

Show me a great athlete and I will show you someone who has made sacrifices. The 20008 Olympics in Beijing reminded us all of athletes that are willing to sacrifice all of their free time for one sport. Exercising, practicing, eating right, and setting goal after goal. They have the desire, and have surely answered the why question. Have you?

Goal Setting: Writing your goals down

It never fails to surprise me how many times people make goals but do not write them down. An unwritten goal is like a faint wish or dream. It is like saying, “well I hope that I can achieve this goal, but if not I will not beat myself up over it.” Power comes from being decisive, taking control of your live and your situation.

Please follow these steps, or ones similar to them, in making your goal. Take out a piece of paper and your favorite pencil and at the top in bold letters write down the answer to your why questions. Why do I want to be on the high school football team? Why do I want to be a starting player? Why do I want to be in shape for the start of the season? Etc.

Now that you have the why question written down, proceed to write down some goals that will help you achieve your “why questions”. Make sure to write down big goals and then split them up into smaller increments. The more traceable your goals are the better meaning instead of a goal “Be the best football player” write down a measurable goal such as “play in all the games” or “score 15 touchdowns this season”

The last step in writing down your goals is to make a plan. Writing down your smaller goals and how they will lead you to your larger goal. Also make a note of the sacrifices that you are going to make, and why you are doing this in the first place. After you have completed your plan, put it altogether in a power statement. An example – “I, john doe, plan to make the most touchdowns this season by exercising 2 hours a day, never missing a practice, not eating junk food, listening to my coach, and having a winning attitude, because I want to help my team win regionals this season”

Conclusion

Whether it be football any other worthwhile accomplishment that you want to make in this life learning how to make goals will be a great benefit. It is important to remember that when you start setting goals to answer the why question, really understand the reasons of what you are doing, and why you are doing it. Also no goal is really set without writing it down. So find an inspiring spot, answer your questions, form your plan, write it all down, and start to see the effects of a powerful goal.

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