NCSA College Athletic Scholarships Blog

Archive for the ‘College Field Hockey’ Category

Athletes Wanted is Now Available

May 4th, 2009 - by Brian Davidson

NCSA founder Chris Krause’ first book, Athletes Wanted is now available to pre-order for shipping June 1st! Athletes Wanted is the premise that athletes are indeed wanted in all areas of society. Just look at the record TV contracts for college and professional sports networks, the rise of ESPN and the conference networks, and the growth of collegiate athletics in popularity year in and year out.

The other areas athletes are wanted is on college campuses and in the professional world. Statistics prove that the recruited student athlete is much more likely to be accepted to a better college or university, and receive a better scholarship and/or grant and aid package. After college employers want former athletes as well. Just polling recruiters and CEO’s it is apparent- former college athletes are in demand for leadership position in every career imaginable!

Why? The book digs into the Athletes Wanted world and is designed to shed light upon why, and gives tips and anecdotes into how you can help maximize your student athlete’s athletic scholarship and eventual life potential.

Student athletes are taught life skills that impact them continuously. The former collegiate student athlete brand is something they carry with them always. Since the average person changes jobs over 25 times throughout their lives, this will come in handy in opening doors, building relationships, along with the learned skill set of hard work, leadership, goal setting, team work, time management, and achievement that will help them succeed at whatever they set their minds to. These invaluable tools will continue to help them thrive in a meaningful and rewarding career to provide for their families and be positive role models, spouses, friends and parents long after the cheers and roar of the crowd are over.

Field Hockey Recruits: How to Make a Quality Video for Coaches

April 30th, 2009 - by Allie Kabat

Video is incredibly important for just about every sport, but in order for it to be beneficial to a coach, it has to be done properly. For field players, you always want to use game footage. Generally, combining one or two games will be sufficient for a highlight video. Skills footage will not be helpful for a coach to evaluate you. Keepers should have half game footage and half skills footage for coaches to be able to fully evaluate you.

How to Film you games:

- Tape from a high perspective when possible (at least several feet from the ground).We highly recommend the use of a tripod as well.
-Do not zoom in and out. The wider the angle the better; coaches want to see the start of the play, the full development and finish. If you are zoomed in so much that they can’t see all of this, the evaluation will be very difficult.
-Imagine the field separated into thirds (offensive, middle, defensive). When the ball is in the offensive or defensive third of the field, film the entire 18-yard box and beyond. When the ball is in the middle of the field, film the entire middle third.
-Show enough of the field so that we are able to see the player’s vision, runs with and without the ball, use of space, combinations with teammates, etc.
-Coaches want to see the progression of each play so you need a wide enough angle to capture multiple players, but they also want to see foot skills and technical abilities so do not lose focus on the primary player you are recording.

Position Specific:

For field players, you should focus on the following for your footage:

-Shooting: High, middle and low shots on goal, both stationary and driven shots
-Stick Skills: Handling the ball under pressure from another player as well as unguarded
-Passing: Show 5 repetitions of each lateral and forward passing, as well as 5 repetitions each of the player receiving lateral and forward passes
-Off-Hand: Repeat shooting and passing skills with your off hand (left hand for
right handed players and vice versa)

For goalies, coaches will want to evaluate the following:

Shots: Show someone shooting on you. Vary the shots and highlight your ability to cover shots on the ground, at the crossbar and in the corners.
Clearing: Show yourself clearing the ball from the goal and from outside the goal in the crease

Video is especially important in recruiting when a coach can’t see you play live. If you follow these tips, you will create a quality video and coaches will be able to give you a proper evaluation.

NCSA Field Hockey Impact Athlete

April 27th, 2009 - by Amanda Rawson

2010 grad, Karla Dixon is a 5′1″ midfielder from Ottawa Hills, Ohio. Dixon is a leader; which is why she is the co-captain of her Ottawa Hills High School varsity field hockey team. She is strong and quick and always continues to push herself on the field.

 

Outside of high school competition Dixon is involved with US Field Hockey Futures Program and has attended various festivals and camps throughout the years. Besides field hockey, she also is a level 9 gymnast, is 2-time all conference for her varsity softball team and runs track as a state qualifier.

Dixon understands how important your grades are and that is why she stated, “The commitment and focus I have learned from sports has helped to keep me strong in the classroom.” She maintains a 3.6 GPA and has been named Academic All Ohio twice. Not only does Dixon get it done in and out of the classroom, she takes time to give back to her community. Dixon is very accomplished and is definitely someone to watch!

Guide to Athletic Recruiting Success

April 24th, 2009 - by Bill Conley

It takes a mature person to understand the keys to being successful and accomplishing goals. It is especially tough when the task is both physical and mental in nature. The steadfast and focused individuals are able to handle the ups and downs that eventually lead to success. The following is a road map for young athletes to follow if they are truly committed to being the best they possibly can be in their particular sport.

Keep All Doors Open

As an athlete, you need to give yourself every opportunity to succeed. The better you are in the classroom the more opportunities you will have in the future. Everyone would like to play at the top level of collegiate competition but we all know those opportunities are limited. If you are talented enough and dedicated, those chances may indeed come to fruition. The ultimate goal, however, is to end up at a school that is the best match for you. The better you are in the classroom, the more choices you will have from which to pick.

Be Committed

Once you have decided to make college athletics your goal, you need to set your game plan and be rigid in keeping your every action toward accomplishing that end result. It’s easy to stray from the disciplines it takes to be successful; only the strong-willed reach their goal.

Let Others Know Your Intentions

As an athlete, don’t be afraid to communicate your intentions. There are a lot of people who can be instrumental in the process. Relatives, coaches, administrators, and friends are just a limited example of those who can be important as you work to accomplish your goal.

Ask For Help

Even though the bulk of your success rests within tour attitude and your efforts, it’s smart to learn from those who have been where you want to go. It doesn’t matter if you’re talking about physical training, improving technical skills, or mental maturity; seek help from those who know what it takes to max out ones’ potential.

Work to Improve

As you go up the athletic ladder the competition gets tougher and tougher. Everybody you will face at the next level will be as good as or better than the best of the best you have already faced. The great athletes thrive on competition and know if you don’t get better you are doomed for failure.

Ignore Naysayers

Remember that not everyone you come in contact with is as dedicated and committed as you. There will be those who try to deter you along the way; even though sometimes not purposefully. Others will be jealous of your successes. It is crucial to keep your eye on the target and not get off track.

Be a Leader

Just as others have done for you, you have an obligation to pay back and pay forward. The examples you set may well be the standard other athletes will use as their guidelines in the future. Remember, the best leaders are those who lead by example.

Learn from Failure

The road to success is a rocky one. There will be ups and downs along the way and it’s important to not dwell on the shortcomings but use them as motivators. Every failure is learning and growing experience. Getting knocked down is going to happen, the key is to get back up and go again.

Share Your Successes

Great teams celebrate together. As an athlete, never forget your success is a team success even if the sport is considered an individual success. Your team is comprised of may who have and continually helped out. Let them know your success is a direct reflection of their help and support.

Believe in Yourself

Confidence in yourself and your convictions is the self-motivator to finish the job. Never waiver from your belief in your own abilities. Others can help but you have to have the grit and determination to do it yourself. The long hours of physical and mental preparation fall solely on your shoulders; be proud.

Coaches Are Watching You on the Internet

April 8th, 2009 - by Brian Davidson

Think college coaches aren’t evaluated players on social networks like Facebook?  Guess again.  NFL scouts even go to length of creating fake profiles of attractive women and friend potential draft picks to see how they will interact.  Charles Robinson of Yahoo! Sports reports on why coaches can’t afford to leave any stone unturned.

“It works like magic,” said a personnel source that was familiar with his team’s tactic of using counterfeit profiles to link to Facebook and Myspace pages of potential draft picks. The source directed Yahoo! Sports to one of the team’s “ghost profiles” – a term he coined because “once the draft is over, they disappear. It’s like they were never there.”

Most NFL players and draft picks still have their own profiles on social networking sites. Every potential first-round pick in this year’s draft currently maintains a presence on Facebook. But many of them learned long ago to scrub their pages of anything that would give teams ammunition to use against them. Perhaps they followed the lead of their predecessors.

“I have a Facebook page. I’m rarely on it. But when I was in college, I didn’t have anything to hide,” said Houston Texans defensive tackle Amobi Okoye, a 2007 first-rounder. “But I was just mindful of whatever was on there. If you had the slightest doubt that it might create some controversy [it wasn't on there]. My whole thing is that I live by the phrase ‘You don’t want to give anybody a reason.’ ”

If NFL coaches are going to this length, so are colleges.  Recruits need to be ware that photos posted of them in Middle School have the chance to later impact their recruiting efforts.  My advice is to avoid any potential scenario where you could be seen to be involved in questionable behavior.

But, recruits could take the idea one step further.  Since they know coaches will be following their activities online, why not use their page to highlight their best attributes?  Use it to show off their highlight video.  Use it to display the charity work they have done in the community.  Take another recruit’s smoking gun, and turn into an advantage.

NCSA Weekly Commitments 3/23

March 23rd, 2009 - by Brian Davidson

Chad Musser, Football, Sterling College
Jack Lazar II, Football, University of Saint Francis
Ethan Kagy, Football, University of Toledo
Jeffrey Heiner, Football, Lindsey Wilson College
Jeremy Caseltine, Football, Miami University–Oxford
Paul Fackler, Football, University of Dayton
Tyler McClure, Football, King’s College
AJ White, Football, University of Texas-Austin
Pablo Gross, Football, Fort Lewis College
Roderick Thomas, Football, University of North Alabama
Anthony Tucker, Football, Augustana College
Casey Monaghan, Football, Virginia Tech
Justin Rayome, Football, Fort Lewis College
Justin Wortman, Football, University of Arkansas
Jamar Rogers, Football, Winston-Salem State University
Tyler Burns, Football, Loras College
Jacob Lilly, Football, Benedictine College
Brian Holman Jr., Football, Oklahoma Panhandle State University
Darrell Harris, Football, University of Charleston
Connor O’Hara, Football, University of Dayton
Quinton Pirl, Football, Robert Morris University
Jonathan Zytkoskee, Football, Wheaton College (IL)
Christopher Tozer, Football, Foothill College
Austin Kubit, Men’s Basketball, St. Xavier University
Taylor Alex, Men’s Lacrosse, Northern Arizona University
Jesse Brennan, Men’s Soccer, University of California–San Diego
Jake Geiger, Men’s Soccer, University of Dubuque
Kyle Adams, Men’s Soccer, Delta State University
Luke Snow, Men’s Soccer, Louisiana State University–Shreveport
Kenny Harriman, Men’s Track, Colorado State University
Courtney White, Softball, University of the Cumberlands
Autumn Taylor, Softball, George Washington University
Renae Tubergen, Softball, Aquinas College
Alyssa Bergquist, Softball, Whitworth College
Erin Johnson, Softball, Iowa State University
Catherine Hensley, Women’s Soccer, New Jersey City University
Katherine Sanderson, Women’s Soccer, Marietta College
Tara Simon, Women’s Soccer, California State University–San Marcos
Lauren Pfister, Women’s Soccer, Philadelphia University
Kyrsten Rezac, Women’s Swimming, University of Arkansas — Little Rock
Tamara Gagne, Women’s Track, Pittsburg State University
Betsy Stevenson, Women’s Volleyball, University of Montevallo

Take Advantage of Your Recruiting Window

March 16th, 2009 - by Charlie Adams

 It has been called “the window.” For example, experts say the Phoenix Suns have missed “their window” to win the NBA title.  The Cleveland Cavaliers are in “their window” to win it.Adams

There is also a “window” to play college sports.

Last summer I was at State University of New York at New Paltz. I was talking with one of their college athletes. She said that when she was in high school she figured she had her four years of high school sports and four years of college sports and that was it. Sure, there would be adult league basketball and slo pitch softball and all of that, but she didn’t want to miss out on “the window” of playing college sports.

This past weekend I delivered “College Recruiting Simplified” at the NIKE Football Combine put on by ESPN RISE. Before speaking, I was talking to a high school football coach from Ohio. He talked about how precious the years were to play high school and college football. Once they were done, serious organized football was over for the great majority of players.

“I am over 40 years old,” he told me. “I can get a few of my buddies and we can play a basketball game. But I am not going to be able to get 21 of my buddies and play a real football game. Kids have one shot to play college football, and after that . . . ”

My advice – do everything you can to make college sports a reality. Don’t let “the window” go by.

Charlie Adams

Important Recruiting Reminder

February 24th, 2009 - by Lisa Strasman

The time is finally here – you have found your dream school. You can not wipe the grin off your face while you call your new coach to inform him that it’s official. Your parents take you out to dinner to celebrate. Your classmates give you high fives in the hall. Congratulations on making your final commitment but you still have one step left.Do you know what it is?

Notify the other coaches that were recruiting you.

Now is the time to contact all the other coaches who courted you throughout the last few years. A phone call is a nice gesture but in most cases a simple email will do the trick. Just do not neglect this courtesy. These coaches spent a lot of time and money telling you about their school and trying to prove that it was the right fit for you. Even though you made another decision, you still owe these coaches a heartfelt “thank you”. There is a good chance you will face off against these coaches for the next four years and in the tumultuous world of college coaching, you never know what the future will bring.

You have put a lot of time, energy and work into your recruiting process, and yes, you deserve some time to celebrate. Soon, however, you must begin your preparation to become a college athlete so do not leave any unfinished business behind you when you enter this next stage in your athletic career.

A Couple Quick Thoughts on the Value of Playing Multiple Sports

February 24th, 2009 - by Charlie Adams

Katie Trainor coaches women’s lacrosse at Goucher College in Maryland. She had some valuable things to say to the Baltimore Sun in an interview, including the role of Camps and the importance of playing multiple sports in high school.

Coach, how many camps should a kid play in during the summer if she wants to play in college?

Katie Trainor: I think that is a decision that a player should make with her parents. Obviously camps are expensive and you need to do your research as to what is the purpose of the camp. If you want to be seen by a certain coach or spend time on a specific campus, then you should go to a camp at that specific college if it is offered. I do not think that players need to be participating in camps all summer — that is an expensive choice and I am a firm believer that the students these days need a bit more free time and fun in the summer. Too many are spending every waking minute of the summer being shuffled to and from lacrosse tournaments and camps, causing burnout.

Coach, are you a fan of multi-sport athletes when recruiting?

Katie Trainor: Absolutely. I think that multi-sport high school athletes have a lot to offer. It’s important not to specialize too early as it promotes a higher burnout rate and also creates situations of muscle overuse. Single-sport athletes can get sick of the sport when they get to college. Participating in multiple sports in high school is a great way to increase one’s overall athleticism in an organized, competitive environment.

—–

When I delivered College Recruiting Simplified at Warsaw High in Warsaw, IN (alma mater of former Laker Rick Fox), I had a long talk with athletic director Joe Santa. Joe had recently delivered a presentation on the value of multiple sports at a conference in San Diego.

He used current Chris Kramer as an example. Chris is currently a key player for Purdue Basketball. Many families might think, “Well, to get my kid to D1 Basketball in the Big Ten, we have to do basketball year round – nothing else!”  Chris Kramer and his family didn’t think that way. When Chris played at Huntington North (IN) High School, he played football, basketball and baseball. He earned eleven varsity letters over four years and set fifteen different school records in three sports. He had D1 offers in three sports.

You know why he played three sports? He said, “Because my friends are playing!”          

-Charlie Adams, NCSA Educational Speaker

Stretching a Recruiting Budget

February 23rd, 2009 - by Brian Davidson

The downturn strikes again.  The New Mexico State University student newspaper The Round Up is reporting that $70,000 for football recruiting from 2008 to 2009.Earlier this month, New Mexico State University football coach DeWayne Walker announced the signing of his first recruiting class – 13 players from California, three from Texas and Arizona and three from Las Cruces and El Paso. But, for parents to be able to watch games in person and to reduce travel costs to and from campus, many highly recruited athletes may decide to stay closer to home, national football recruiting analyst Tom Lemming said.

“In our case, Coach Walker has identified areas of Texas, California, New Mexico and possibly Arizona, so obviously the travel is significantly reduced,” Athletic Director McKinley Boston said. “We can fly Southwest Airlines from El Paso directly into L.A. or San Diego or almost any other place in California. That’s going to be his strong hold in terms of recruiting, so in that regard that is not really going to be a problem.”

However, if you are an athlete outside of a school’s primary recruiting area there is still another option.  Coaches will be relying on the internet to evaluate players like never before.  Athletes can leverage resources like NCSA’s Scouting Report and Recruit-Match Database to open up doors that may have previously been closed.  Building strong relationships with college coaches will continue to be the key to unlocking your recruiting potential.  Finding creative ways to build them will be valued at a premium.