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Archive for the ‘IMG’ Category

Why It Is Critical to See What Kind of College Programs YOU Qualify For…

October 19th, 2011 - by Charlie Adams

Every time a NCSA Recruiting Expert like Tony Collins, Brent Williams, Nicole Watson, Paul Putnam or Bob Chmiel addresses an audience, we realize lives can and will be literally changed from that Event. I got this powerful note from a family that heard the College Recruiting Simplified presentation I delivered at the world-class IMG Academies in Florida last summer  – Charlie Adams

NCSA Recruiting Expert Charlie Adams

Dear Mr. Adams

My name is Vijayan Rajes and I live on a coffee plantation in a very small village located on the Shevaroy Hills, in Tamilnadu state in India.  My wife and I met you briefly at Bradenton, FL, in summer 2010 while our son Vishnu was there for tennis training at IMG.

We were there at IMG to try and improve the chances of Vishnu being recruited to play college tennis.  His aim was to play serious tennis and pursue his education.  Our goal was to try and get him the best possible college for tennis and academics.  We felt that we were groping in the dark and did not know what the future held in store for us.  We were glad to hear of your presentation and eagerly attended.  Subsequently, with the help of Justin and Kyle we were the first at IMG Camps to sign up with NCSA, as we were returning to India in a few days.  The recruitment video and all the assistance we received was timely and invaluable.  Sitting in a remote area in India we felt secure   to know we had someone representing our interest in the US.  Vishnu was recruited within a few months to Washington College, Chestertown, MD.  He did recieve some very interesting and financially lucrative offers from several colleges, but finally decided on Washington
College for its very highly ranked academic program.

My wife, Madhumathi and I accompanied Vishnu in Aug 2011 to Washington College in time for the fall semester.  We felt extremely satisfied and immediate knew that we made the right choice the minute we landed on campus.  The feedback we had been recieving from the staff at NCSA was spot on.  We felt we were at the right place immediately.  We spent the next two weeks in the Chestertown area and made some new friends on and off campus.  We also visited some old friends in the DC area.  They all were curious to know how we found Washington College in Chestertown, MD, while living in Yercaud, India.  My reply was we never found them, they found us, thanks to NCSA.

I am glad to inform you that Vishnu is happily settled in Washington College and plays on their tennis team.

We thank you and the entire team of NCSA for all the help.

Best Regards

Vijayan Rajes

This is what it is all about. They were able to do the critical Evaluation with a College Scout, get into the Network, and utilize the resources to match with the right fit. After receiving the letter above from them, I asked Mr. Rajes some follow up questions:

CHARLIE ADAMS: Looking back, what were the most important factors in the recruiting process?

VIJAYAN RAJES: The SAT score was an important qualification.  Being a foreign student, the TOEFL score was given important weightage.

CHARLIE ADAMS: What do you think are the most valuable things about being in the NCSA Network?

VIJAYAN RAJES:  Making sure the student athlete’s academic ability and athletic skill level are well matched with colleges.

CHARLIE ADAMS:  What do you think is the most important factor in finding the ‘right fit’ for a son or daughter?

VIJAYAN RAJES:  The NCSA database is an independent one-stop shop for all US college coaches.  The NCSA subscriber also has access to lots of college coaches from a single source.

CHARLIE ADAMS: At NCSA, our top priority is to develop Athleaders and to prepare athletes for the next 40 years of life. How do you think your son being a student-athlete in College will prepare him for life?

VIJAYAN RAJES:  The student athlete has a wider circle of friends and acquaintances besides just classmates. He or she and interacts with coaches, trainers, colleagues on the team, other athletes, other college players.  This level of interaction and being a team member for four years will prepare them to be a team player and also improve their
communication skills.
Thank you, Mr. Rajes, for those insights.

Parents, student-athletes, it is important to have a thorough discussion with a College Scout to understand what kind of College programs you qualify for and to get a thorough and realistic evaluation. You have to understand how to make sure your athlete is being looked at by the right Coaches. We have set up a block of time for these Evaluations. See if you qualify to talk with a College Scout by going to the important link below.

Charlie Adams, NCSA Athletic Recruiting Network
cadams@ncsasports.org

Here is How Tim Tebow Handled the Recruiting Process

June 22nd, 2011 - by Charlie Adams

(Editor’s Note: Tim Tebow’s winning ways as a NFL starter created a great deal of interest in the highly competitive athlete. Tebow recently shared how he went through the recruiting process. Speaker Charlie Adams reviewed his popular book and wrote this article on how Tebow had success in finding the right College fit for him)

I speak on NCSA’s mission of Athleadership to athletes from around the world at locations such as the world class IMG Academies in Bradenton, Florida. NCSA Athletic Recruiting Network is the recruiting education partner of IMG, where the likes of Kobe Bryant, Venus and Serena Williams, Drew Brees, Eli Manning and Nomar Garciaparra have trained.

IMG Academies Campers Learn About Recruiting from NCSA

While traveling to Florida, I read with great interest the book of University of Florida great Tim Tebow. Tebow was the first sophomore in NCAA History to win the Heisman Trophy. He helped Florida win two BCS National Championships.

In all of my years of studying peak performer athletes and the recruiting process, I have always felt the number one quality of success is having ‘the fire within’ and being able to keep it stoked. Stoke the fire within!.

Tim Tebow’s fire is always stoked. The way he is winning as Broncos quarterback has a lot of people talking.

His book, “Through My Eyes” (Harper Collins Publishers) is a powerful read and filled with tools and insights that would help any athlete and coach. He explains his inner fire and how he keeps it stoked.

Tim Tebow's new book includes a chapter on his recruiting

Tebow includes an entire chapter on his recruiting process as a Quarterback in Jacksonville, FL. Though it seemed everyone ahead of him in his family went to the University of Florida and that he would have been a lock to go there, he states that he was open minded in the process. Alabama actually started out as the leader. Their fans used to come to his games as a tenth grader holding up signs trying to get him to come to Tuscaloosa.

Tebow and his family started making Unofficial Visits in his tenth grade year. Start the process early, folks. That’s what he did. Unofficial Visits are where it is on your dime, but they are a great way to develop relationships, get a feel for schools, meet Coaches and athletes, and more. The Tebow’s took them to Alabama a bunch of times, LSU, Florida State, Miami, Ohio State, Michigan, Southern Cal, Florida, Clemson, Notre Dame and others. He says South Bend was too cold (ironically the NFL team that drafted him was the Broncos in snowy and cold Denver) and Southern Cal was too far away from Florida.

One of the things I tell audiences is go where they really want you. Tebow could tell Alabama stood out there, as did Florida. A deep faith young man, Tebow said ‘Bama really did their research on him. It’s a given that when football recruits visit the bigtime schools, they line up the pretty girls as hosts, but at ‘Bama they were sincere Christian young ladies. ‘Bama knew how important his faith was to him. Other schools tried to throw girls at him, which was a turnoff because they had not learned enough about him to know he was serious about his faith.

Many of you will experience rejection by some schools in recruiting or have your dream school spurn you. The amazing Tim Tebow, who would go on and become a six foot three inch and two hundred and forty pound QB, was rejected as well. He says once Georgia got a commitment from quarterback Matthew Stafford (now with the Detroit Lions) they quit recruiting him, and were up front with him about it. He says on a visit to Tennessee his eleventh grade year they hardly paid attention to him. Just one assistant coach spoke to him. They were fawning over another quarterback prospect.

It is imperative young people know that their actions are being monitored all the time. Tebow says during his junior year Florida Coach Urban Meyer was allowed to get out and evaluate during the Spring and watched him play a baseball game. Coach Meyer told him later he was really impressed with Tebow’s leadership and that he had never seen a right fielder impact a team the way he did. College Coaches are always looking for those kinds of things. They really love the kids that are leaders in different sports. They also are big on speaking to all kinds of people in the building to get various takes on character. If you are a weasel, they will find out, scratch you off their recruiting list, and go to the next athlete. They often get candid insights from the cafeteria lady, the janitor or someone else off the beaten path. Always do the right thing. Scholarships are on the line.

In recruiting it is important to know when Coaches can call or email you in your sport so you have a feeling of where you stand in recruiting. Tebow writes that Sept. 1 of his senior year was when they could start calling, and at 12:01 AM that day he got a call from Louisville. The calls kept coming!

You can take five Official Visits as a senior and Tebow picked Alabama, Florida, LSU, Michigan and Southern Cal for his Visits. At Alabama one sign in the stands of a home game read: STABLER, NAMATH, TEBOW. That gets the attention of a kid!

Tebow writes that relationships with the Coach would be very important to him. Tebow is one of the most competitive athletes in history, so he felt close to Urban Meyer, who Tebow describes in his book as having “a work ethic and drive that were unparalleled.”

It is obvious in reading the book that Tebow was having a real hard time between Florida and Alabama. He had huge respect for ‘Bama Head Coach Mike Shula, a man of faith.

After many Talks I give, parents will come up to me and say, “Charlie, my child is good at two sports and she just can’t decide which one to play in College and focus on being recruiting in that sport.” Tebow was very good in baseball and football and probably could have gone pro in baseball one day. Here is how he puts it as far as how he decided which to pursue: “I did love baseball. Turning and connecting on an inside fastball is a great feeling. But football was my passion….”

What is your passion as a sport? I remember talking with the parents of former Mishawaka High standout offensive lineman Nick Banke. He was good enough in football to earn D1 offers and appeared headed that way, but one day he realized that his passion was taking his shot and discus across the street to the local park and working on that sport. It was his passion. He ended up signing with the University of Akron as a Thrower on the Track and Field team.

One of the factors in picking a school is the chance to play early. Tebow knew if he went to Florida they had an established senior at QB in Chris Leake, and that he probably wouldn’t start until sophomore year. At ‘Bama, he had a chance to start as a freshman. That was a factor to him but not a major one.

As I touched on earlier, Tebow made it clear the relationship with his Head Coach and other Coaches would be very important. I believe if you have the potential to be a professional athlete, then the Head Coach is critical in the recruiting process. However in 95% of the other cases in recruiting, the athlete is going pro in something other than their sport, as the NCAA says. In my view, the Coach is very important but having your Major, ranking of the school academically, and other things are more important. In Tebow’s case, though, he states it this way: “The identity of the coach was critical in making my decision.”

Although in football Signing Date isn’t until the first Wednesday in February, Tebow had decided to announce in December partly so he could help recruit other good players to wherever he was going. When it came time to announce, he still didn’t know when he woke up. He did call LSU, Michigan and Southern Cal and tell them he was not going there, but as far as Florida and Alabama, he was still torn.

“It was down to the final two. I had been praying about it regularly, and my family was praying as well. I had no doubt that the Lord was leading throughout this whole process, but what was unclear was determining where He was leading. People often seem to think that when you’re following the Lord and trying to do His will, your path will always be clear, the decisions smooth and easy, and life will be lived happily ever after and all that. Sometimes that may be true, but I’ve found that more often, it’s not. The muddled decisions still seem muddled, bad things still happen to believers, and great things can happen to non believers. When it comes to making our decisions, the key that God is concerned with is that we are trusting and seeking Him. God’s desire is for us to align our lives with His Word and His will.”

Tebow writes those feelings in his book but he would have appreciated if God had just yelled down from the heavens where to sign. That didn’t happen (what a Press Conference it would have been if that had happened!). Thirty minutes before his Press Conference, he still did not know. Florida? Alabama? He had such high respect for both head coaches that it was eating him up.

Twenty minutes before, he decided on Florida. He called ‘Bama Coach Mike Shula, who was very gracious. “Tim,” he began, “I love you as a person and a player. When I told you that you were going to have a great career and life of meaning, I meant it. I wanted it to be here, but it’s still true. I still love you, and you’re still going to do great things, even if it’s not at Alabama.”

Florida Coach Meyer had dealt with the anguish of waiting on Tebow’s decision by sitting on the forty-fifth row of Florida Field because forty five is his lucky number. In his book, Tebow cites Meyer’s passion as a major reason he announced for Florida. Both men are as passionate as they come. Tebow and Meyer would go on and become very close, having many talks about faith, competition and many other thing’s over the next four years.

Tebow signed with Florida, had a spectacular career, and has written an amazing book that reveals his inner fire. He shares his weightlifting and fitness routines, leadership insights, and much more. Athletes can learn how to stoke the fire within by reading about Tebow’s relentless fire.

At the start of each of his chapters, he has a Bible Verse. To lead off the chapter on his Recruiting experience, he shares Jeremiah 29:11 “I know the plans that I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans for welfare and not for calamity to give you a future and a hope.”

Charlie Adams, NCSA Athletic Recruiting Network Senior Speaker

cadams@ncsasports.org

To bring Charlie Adams to speak at your School, Club or Event, contact Amanda Rawson at arawson@ncsasports.org

To see if you qualify to talk to a College Scout about Recruiting

For more information on Tim Tebow’s book “Through My Eyes”

What Athletes Are College Coaches Looking For?

February 22nd, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

What position is a coach recruiting this year?  What is in dire need?  What specifically are they looking for?

All very difficult questions to answer.  That is why the NCSA Recruiting Network gets requests directly from college coaches.  Its just one example of the connections the network makes with college coaches and verified athletes.  Everyone can see the most recent coaching request by logging in to their recruiting management system here!

You can also check out the free e-book we put together:   Sport Specific Recruiting Guide

Take a look at these recent examples from every division level across the country!

We just had some changes to commitments and are now in need of an outside and a middle to contribute immediately this fall.

 If you have anyone who you could recommend that would be great.

Current recruiting needs:

Pitchers and Shortstops

Current recruiting needs:

Division I caliber player, 3.0 gpa or higher, 1200 SAT or higher, well rounded student-athlete, has a reasonable level of self funding to supplement an athletic or academic scholarship, comfortable attending a historically black university that now has a diverse population of students

Current recruiting needs:

Need Point Guard, and two shooting guards and three Forwards

Current recruiting needs:

Women Distance, Butterfly and Sprint events Men Sprint and Backstroke events

Current recruiting needs:

Female High Jumpers who have personal bests over or around 5’6″ Male High jumpes with personal bests over 6′

Coach request content: I am looking at all positions for the 2011 season. We are coming off a 25-12 season but with the lose of 4 seniors I want players who can make an immediate impact. I look for quality students athletes that can work hard in the classroom and on the court.

Current recruiting needs:

Aggresive forwards to can finish (who doesn’t need those)

Coach request content: Still looking to add one more pitcher to our roster from the graduating class of 2011, or a JC transfer. We are looking for a pitcher with speed and good command of her pitches.

If you are interested in seeing the most recent requests be sure to log in to your RMS!

When Should I Send my Recruiting Highlight Video?

February 16th, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

Many athletes are not sure when the best time is to send out a recruiting highlight video to college coaches.  Athletes are always eager to get recruited, but you don’t want to turn off an entire coaching staff by showing film that doesn’t showcase their talent in the best light.

The first rule of thumb is to hold off on sending highlights to any schools until you have varsity footage.  Recruits NEED TO START AS EARLY AS POSSIBLE, but until you are on varsity your focus needs to be on building relationships and getting educated.   That said, don’t wait too long before sending footage.  Waiting until after your season is over can be way too late.  As soon as you can wow a coach with the first few minutes of highlights it is time to get them footage.

Once a coach has your first highlight tape it’s important to have a full-game ready.  Coaches use highlights to determine if a recruit makes their priority lists, but they use full games to really make a true evaluation.  As you progress as an athlete its important to keep updating coaches with fresh footage to ensure you stay on their recruiting board.

The final piece to the puzzle is making sure your video gets in the hands of the right college coaches.  Coaching staffs usually divide recruits by position and region.  If your video ends up in the wrong inbox from a random mailing address it is likely to end up in the garbage.

The key to getting your video evaluated by the right coaches is to have it delivered to hundreds of schools by a reliable source that coaches trust.   Without a filter (like the NCSA Network) coaches don’t have the time to filter through the hundreds (if not thousands) of videos that show up.

So get your video ready as soon as possible and get it into the hands of the right coaches!

(You can plug in to the NCSA network for free  HERE and learn how we can deliver your video to the right schools)

Vote for the NCSA Student-Athlete of the Month!

February 9th, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

NCSA’s recruiting experts have selected some of their top student-athletes in different sports based on their academic, athletic and recruiting success.  We need your help to vote for the  Student-Athlete of the Month for February!

Voting is easy…

1. Read through a quick description of the student-athlete

2. Click on the link below the description to view more information

3. Click the “Like” button featured at the bottom of their Recruiting Profile if you feel like they are the best candidate for NCSA Student-Athlete of the Month

Here are the three candidates for NCSA Student-Athlete of the Month for February:

Thorir Fienberg: 2011 Graduate, Men’s Soccer Student-Athlete from California

Vote for Thorir Fienberg HERE

Philip Schanilec: 2011 Graduate, Men’s Basketball Student-Athlete from North Dakota

Vote for Philp Schanilec HERE

Alexander Gebert: 2011 Graduate, Baseball Student-Athlete from Texas

Vote for Alexander Gebert HERE

Feel free to send this to as many people as possible to make sure your favorite wins this month!

Coach Taylor’s Signing Day Special Tonight! Live at 7 pm CST

February 3rd, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

For all you football fans out there, be sure to tune into Coach Taylor’s live “Signing Day Special” Thursday, February 3rd at 7 pm CST. He will break down the top recruiting classes and signing day “winners” and “losers.” Coach will also be doing Q&A,s o be sure to sign in to the chat below!


Free live streaming by Ustream

Share a Story on Facebook and Win an iPad

February 1st, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

In honor of National Signing Day NCSA will be giving away an iPad to help ALL students (Not just the just the lucky few signing on ESPN!) with their course load in college next year!

How can you enter?  Just post something on our Facebook page www.facebook.com/ncsasports and tell your friends to LIKE it!

-You can post a video of your recruiting story!

-A short post about how you achieved an academic scholarship

-A picture of you signing a national letter of Intent

Anything posted on our Wall will constitute an entry!  The winner with the most LIKES will win an iPad! The contest will run for 2 ½ weeks and we will notify the winner February 18th.

**This is open to all students and athletes**

How College Coaches ELIMINATE Players

January 3rd, 2011 - by Brian Davidson

College coaches usually start with thousands of players on their recruiting boards. How do they manage to trim such a huge list into a signed, sealed and delivered? With a ton of hard evaluation work! Much of that work takes place inside, “The War Room,” where coaches deliberate on the various pluses (and minuses) a player brings to the table. Be sure to watch the segment below featuring the NCSA recruiting team reenacting what REALLY happens when coaches make the hard decisions that define a recruiting class.

Tennis Recruiting Insights with Charlie Adams

December 1st, 2010 - by Charlie Adams

The IMG Academies in Bradenton, Florida plays host to the prestigious Eddie Herr International Junior Tennis Championships every November. The Eddie Herr has seen the likes of Roger Federer, Maria Sharapova, Andy Roddick, David Nalbandian, Anna Kournikova, Mardy Fish, Xavier Malisse, Marcelo Rios, Jelena Jankovic, and Ana Ivanovic play in their younger days.

Over 2000 players from around the world play in the event. The NCSA Athletic Recruiting Network is brought in to deliver the recruiting education to the hundreds of families on hand. I was able to speak on the College Recruiting Process several times, as well as have conversations with people about recruiting. As always, there are key points here that families with athletes in all sports can learn from.

I had a conversation over lunch with the head coach of a mid level Division One tennis program. He was candid in his assessment of finding qualified prospects with regards to being very good players as well as sound academically and being ‘good kids.’

“We are in this age of ‘entitlement’ with some kids,” said the coach. “Good kids are getting tougher to find. I am talking about the player with the tremendous work ethic and that has respect for elders and things of that nature. That’s why a lot of international players are appealing. Many have English as a second language yet they are still stronger academically than many U.S. kids, plus they are more approachable and appreciate any scholarships, including partials. If a lot of American kids don’t start working harder, I will recruit more internationals.”

I approached the head coach of a Big Ten Conference tennis program and chatted a bit as he watched prospects. Coaches use verified sources such as NCSA, the recommendation of a coach they trust, or ratings from sites such as tennisrecruiting.net to build their recruiting lists. “Ratings all mean something different,” he said. “The trick is figuring out what they will do at the next level once they leave High School age.”

Another high level D1 Tennis coach said that while ratings are very important, it is not always the bottom line with their program. They look for that player that has that insatiable desire to keep getting better.

Another coach told me he is looking for that player that loves tennis, that isn’t doing it because he feels he ‘has to’ or because he has been doing it his whole life. A coach told me that while they like to learn about players in the 9th grade, you never know if they will stop putting in the work, fall in love, or just not develop.

While watching matches, I talked with Nick Rybakova, who has a daughter, Katie, who is an All ACC tennis player for Florida State. Katie, who is now a senior at FSU, was ranked #6 in Florida’s under 18 girls category coming out of High School in Coral Springs, FL.

“The most important thing is not the ranking,” said Nick. “It is the attitude. That is 90% of it – how they handle themselves on the court. Are they fighting for every point? Sure, the rankings are very important and show something, but attitude is big.”

Katie graduated High School as valedictorian of her class with a 4.0 GPA. She has made All ACC all three years so far, as well as being Academic All ACC.

“I will tell you another thing,” her Dad added. “In college tennis it is all hard courts. Having the ability to hit a heavy ball with a power serve is very important.”

I spoke with the mother of Remi Ramos, a 14 year old class of 2014 tennis prospect who, like many tennis players, is being home schooled.

“She wanted to be home schooled so she could be on the court more,” said her mother. “I was saying you should go back to School, but this is something she wants. This is all her doing. She is ranked about 100th in the country and in the top 20 in Florida. She was injured for six months and came back in March. We do all the Florida Sectionals, the Level 2 Nationals, the Super Nationals, the Eddie Herr, the Orange Bowl tournament. Eventually she wants to be an Orthopedist and specialize in Sports Medicine. Her goal is to play for Stanford or Florida, get a full scholarship and play #1 or #2.”

The catch there is that there are so many other girls at tournaments like the Eddie Herr that have similar goals. I talked to many parents, and if I had a nickel for how many said their daughter wanted to play #1 or #2 Singles at schools like Stanford, Florida, Notre Dame, Duke, and so on, I would have a lot of nickels. A difference maker will be who plays the recruiting game the best. That is why NCSA is there, to help them manage the process and get the exposure.

Not every player at an event like the Eddie Herr is interested in playing College on scholarship. I talked with countless players that had their aim set straight on going professional.

On one of the courts at the sprawling IMG Academies, I came across 21 year old Kim Couts blasting balls with a practice partner. Her mother Shelby was there watching and supporting her. Kim is one of those that bypassed playing College Tennis because her dream was to go pro. Kim was a top juniors player. She won the 2006 Easter Bowl and won her first pro event on the USTA Pro Circuit in June of 2007 when she won the $10,000 Evansville, IN tourney.

As we stood there watching her practice, her mother said it was the first time in 3 weeks she had played. The strain of the pro season had been so much that she withdrew from her last tournament to recharge her batteries. Kim is ranked 285th in the world in Singles and 185th in doubles.

“It is mental,” said her mother. “Closing those matches is the big thing. Everyone that is professional can hit the ball beautifully. Their ground strokes are solid. It’s winning those big points in the 3rd set that make a difference. Having that attitude of getting it done. Unless your are over six feet, and even then there are a pile of girls that are good retrievers, so much of it is mental.”

Shelby has been supportive of her daughter since they came to Florida when Kim was 11 to get serious about this journey. She said Kim has always been focused and had success academically and athletically. College was on her mind, but at age 15 she decided to go after the pro route.

“It has been an amazing experience,” she said. “Not every minute, mind you, and it is definitely not glamorous, but I have been able to watch my kid develop and travel. We have had to have sponsorship support and the challenge is at some point you have to make a living at it, but Kim has always wanted to go pro and I said, ‘Go for it!’”

I talked to many families from around the world that are dead set on their child going pro as soon as possible. I don’t think people realize how many others are taking that route. I will say that the IMG Academies would certainly make a major impact on whether that dream comes true or not, but I also urge families to strongly consider the college tennis route as well. Remember, the massive majority of young athletes will go pro in something other than their sport. My message to the families, during my Talks, was to look strongly at college tennis at a top academic institution. A lot of the players at an event like Eddie Herr are gunning for top D1 programs, and that is a realistic goal for many of them, but many families also look strongly at other levels, especially D3. There are tremendous programs at the top level of D3, and a lot of highly rated players. Tennis families are usually very academic-strong families. They understand the power of a degree from a top University. That is why you see D3 tennis powers at such schools as Williams College, Amherst, Emory, University of Chicago, and Washington and Lee University. Those are some of the highest rated Universities in the country.

To get an Evaluation of where you are in the Tennis recruiting process

Charlie Adams, Recruiting Expert and Parent of NCAA Athlete

cadams@ncsasports.org

To bring Recruiting Education to your Club, School or special event, contact Amanda Rawson at arawson@ncsasports.org

Encore Presentation: College Recruiting Videos 101 Part II

October 18th, 2010 - by Brian Davidson

Last week we hosted an exclusive webcast explaining the most cutting edge methods to producing a college recruiting highlight video.  If you missed the event, you can check it out HERE!

Based on the success, we are excited to announce a surprise PART 2 to air on Tuesday, October 19th at 9 pm EDT / 8 pm CDT / 6 pm PDT.

We encourage you to tune in and watch the NCSA Video Team and Coach Taylor talk about:

- The best way to distribute your highlight video

- How college coaches evaluate recruiting videos

As always, you can view ALL our live web events on the following link:

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/randy-taylor-presents-college-recruiting-simplified

If you click the link, you can “RSVP” at the bottom of the page which will help you remember to tune in.

***If you would like to learn more about taking advantage of the NCSA Video Team to produce YOUR highlight video, call 312-205-7519. They have enhanced more than 17,000 Recruiting Videos in 27 different sports**