So you think you can play at the next level? You have invested endless hours in individual, club and high school basketball practices and games.
Lots of money has been spent on training, uniform and tournament travel associated expenses. You have also burned the candles late into many nights with countless hours studying to ensure that your academic performance attracts rather than detract from your chances of playing basketball on the collegiate level.
The road has been difficult so far and the time has arrived for you to reach out for that basketball college scholarship. You have both the game and the grades and now you are ready to take the final steps to make the college basketball scholarship offer come true.
Below are critical steps that can make that dream come to fruition:
No.1: Take the Right Classes
Make sure that your high school core course schedule is in-line with the requirements of your choice of college(s).
No.2: Register With the NCAA
No later than your Junior year, register with the NCAA Eligibility Center to validate your status as an amateur athlete.
No.3: Make Your List(s)
Compile a list of schools you would like to attend. Make sure to divide them into three sub-lists of four or five schools per list with each list categorized as either the A, B or C list to ensure that you establish a range of best to acceptable schools.
No.4: Create a Video
The recruiting video is one of the most important ways an athlete can attract the attention of coaches at the university level. Avoid substandard video quality and unnecessary production components. You should have 10 to 15 highlight plays-- with an additional game half included to show real-time ability. Keep your video short, simple and as professional-looking as possible. Hiring a videographer might be a worthwhile expense.
No. 5: Research the Schools
Check out the school's website to find out the best coach or school official to contact. Get to know the school’s basketball history to include both information on the coaching staff, current and former players, successes and playing system. Be knowledgeable about the school and know why you want to attend the institution.
No.6: First Contact
Place yourself on a college's radar in an aggressive--but friendly--way. It is a good idea to begin contacting coaches in the summer before your sophomore year.
Include an introduction explaining who you are and why you're contacting them and a copy of your recruiting video or a link where they can view your video. Include all this in a recruiting resume with details such as stats, honors, academic data and contact information for your high school coaches. Contact can be done by telephone as well but it is highly recommended that you mail your resume first and then follow-up with a telephone outreach.
No.7: Increase Your Game--and Your Exposure--at a University Basketball Camp
School basketball camps generally serve to help an athlete get better and to help an athlete get noticed. Consider this a job interview and like any job, it's all about networking and creating relationships. Be on your best behavior and be ready to learn as much as possible. You might just get recruited, without even realizing it.
No.8: The Final Choice
When making a final choice on scholarship offers presented, take a close look at the quality of the education at the school, the financial package offered and whether you will get playing time. For example, are they offering a full-ride? A partial scholarship? If one school offers a significantly greater financial award, it shouldn't be considered lightly since it helps you to both avoid going into major debt and it demonstrates their interest in you as an athlete and a student. Will you be receiving playing time on the next level. Do you have a good chance of getting in the starting lineup by your sophomore and junior year?
At the end of the day, choose the school that offers you the best environment for athletic, academic and personal development.
WHAT IS A POST-GRAD BASKETBALL PROGRAM AND IS IT FOR YOU?
A post-graduate basketball program is normally a residential program dedicated to increasing opportunities for post-graduate athletes to be recruited to play college basketball. Basketball players have the unique opportunity to mature while getting physically stronger. They gain the experience of playing college basketball competing nationally against junior college basketball programs, and some include playing some of the top post-graduate teams in the country. They gain national exposure through events which attract various college basketball recruiters from across the country. Many college programs endorse post-graduate programs thus positioning many of the players with an added advantage of being recruited over other athletes as these players have gained experience playing collegiate-level basketball before becoming a college basketball player.
Post-Grad Basketball
Post-graduate program is for the student-athlete looking for an extra year to become more physically, mentally or academically prepared for college without loosing any of their 4 years of college eligibility.
Normally, post-graduate programs operates on a nine-month schedule (September-May) in order to prepare young men and women for the hectic schedule of a collegiate student-athlete after they have graduated from a traditional high school. The programs are optimized to provide the best in basketball training while enhancing the college recruitment opportunities of the student-athlete.
The best programs include competition with (but is not limited to) top junior colleges and high-level prep tournaments around the nation. Athletes participate in two or more on-court workouts per day along with daily athletic performance training. Additionally, they receive mentorship and guidance in the college recruitment and selection process. All the while, the student-athlete continues to focus on individual skill training. Program coaches then work with each player to plan a schedule for individual training, summer camps, tournaments and leagues that will provide maximum opportunity for improvement, development, and exposure in the summer months.
Post-Grad Academics
It's equally as crucial for post-grad student-athletes to continue their academic development while evolving athletically. Elite programs have both in-house and extended academic options either located on their campus or in partnership with local educational institutions near the post-grad program. Enrollment into the post-grad programs allow the student-athletes to improve their academic profile and SAT scores, further develop study and writing skills, and take Advanced Placement coursework – which can lead to college credit. Enrollment in quality post-grad programs should offer the opportunity to earn college credit and give the student-athletes a true taste of college life on a part-time basis.
With a top level post-grad program that offers a variety of college level preparatory, encouraging instructors and an accommodating schedule, the student-athlete should be positioned to enter college fully prepared academically and athletically.
Costs
Post-Grad programs are not cheap. Tuition can range from $5,000 to $50,000 per year, although many offer full-ride scholarships for those student-athletes with maximum potential to move on to the next level. Like all things in life, buyer beware must be in the forefront since there are always bad, good and great post-graduate programs spread out throughout the United States and beyond. A critical component that should have priority in the decision-making process on whether to attend a post-grad program is to determine if the program is in good standing or accredited by the NCAA and/or the college/university that they student-athelte wants to attend.
The 13th Annual Arizona Preps Fall Showcase, Arizona's original showcase basketball event, will be held October 29-30th, 2011.
The biggest and most exciting exposure event of the year will be held once again at the Arizona Premier Basketball Academy in Gilbert, Arizona. This event will, once again, be attended by some of the top national and regional basketball scouting services in the country, and will be open to all high school aged boys and girls basketball players in the state.
Anthony Ray is known throughout Arizona as one of the original basketball community leaders with forward-leaning initiatives designed to showcase the best of the best youth basketball players in the area.
The Arizona Preps Fall Showcase is considered to be the area’s original showcase basketball event that has inspired the growth of many other showcases. With Arizona’s growing population and its equally growing multiple youth basketball initiatives, much credit is given to Anthony Ray who has led the way in putting Arizona youth basketball on the map.
In addition to the showcase, Anthony Ray is also the lead behind ArizonaPreps.com and one of the top AAU clubs in the country , the Arizona Magic Club Organization. For more information on ArizonaPreps.com click here. For more information on the Arizona Magic Club Teams, click here. For more details on the 13th Annual Arizona Preps Fall Showcase, click here.
Video on Last Year's 2010-2011 Arizona Preps Fall Showcase
The dictionary defines a 'haboob' as an intense duststorm commonly observed in arid regions throughout the world. This year Arizona's Phoenix metro has been visited by three major haboobs literally paralyzing the 5th largest metro area in the U.S.
There is a fourth one on the way whose ferocity and overall impact will be just as impactful to this Southwest metropolis. The only difference this time is that the first three were unanticipated while the one about to hit us this weekend is fully predictable but will have basketballs, referees, talented bballers and enthusiastic parents comprising the flying debree as opposed to the usual Arizona desert dust associated with haboobs.
Who is the wind behind this force of nature? Two words: Ron Coleman.
With a reputation of providing multiple and solid tournaments executed under the Southwest Showcase banner, Ron has forged a presence in Arizona as a leading figure in the area's competitive youth basketball community. In 2010, he introduced the All Arizona Showcase which attracted more than 300 players who participated in a talent showcase and combine the likes of which is difficult to duplicate.
But duplication is exactly what is about to happen this coming October 15 weekend as the 2011 All Arizona Showcase thunders into our metropolis with an expected 400 plus participants. Showcase games, dunk and 3-point contests are in this desert tornados' wind.
More importantly, the best of the best basketball players will descend on Ron's showcase and when it is all over this Habbob's debree will not be blown trees and stranded vehicles, but instead, expect to see tired but excited basketball gladiators and wide-eyed spectators, writers and scouts gleefully holding on for dear life from the 2011 All Arizona Showcase winds as Ron's Southwest Showcase All Arizona event speeds away on Sunday night into the record books only to return once again in 2012.
The good news is that this haboob is predicatble and is one that does not offer low visibility and gritty dirt in our eyes, but instead, offers us a crystal clear glimpse of the future of Arizona basketball by viewing the developing stars today.
For more information on the All Arizona Showcase, click here.
Jose Morales | JuniorHoops.com | Talent Scout, Writer & Event Analyst
Considered by many as one of the top point guards in the west coast, Cesar Guerrero is representing in this Ballislife.com video. His playmaking and attack dribble skills is representing, not only Latino ballers, but also, everyone of all races who lays it out all on the floor with no mercy and taking no prisoners. Check out the moves and the hustle. Showing heart all the way and skills to go with that "corazon'....and a big "palo".
Whether you are a NCAA Division I, Division II, Division III, NAIA or JUCO program, having access to the most complete and detailed recruiting information really advantages you over your competition. For almost a decade, over 150 programs such as Duke, Louisville, Illinois, Michigan State, UConn, Kentucky, Arizona, Cal, Michigan, Cincinnati, Kansas, Utah, Stanford, Clemson, Oregon, USC, Missouri, UNLV, Washington, Temple, Arizona State, Oregon State, Virginia Tech, Texas, Memphis, Iowa State, Providence, Virginia, Wake Forest, Texas A&M, North Carolina, Washington State, UCLA, Wyoming, New Mexico, Pepperdine, SMU, Syracuse, Fresno State, San Francisco, Colorado State, Villanova, Texas Tech, Northwestern, Vanderbilt, Alabama, St. John’s and St. Joseph’s have had access to the essential and accurate recruiting information they need first. They all have subscribed to the Fullcourt Press.
But the Fullcourt Press is not just for big time programs. Ivy League schools such as Penn, Princeton and Columbia and lower division schools such as Chapman, Concordia, Redlands, Occidental and Cal Lutheran find the Fullcourt Press useful in seeking the type of prospective student-athletes that fit their respective programs. Five information-packed reports per year (plus two highly valued HS coaches and AAU/club coaches phone directories) give subscribers the data they need to intelligently recruit Southern California. Additionally, subscribers have the comfort in knowing that the Fullcourt Press is ready and rapidly responsive to any particular questions or requests for information that they may have.
The Fullcourt Press reports are available only to NCAA I, II, III, NAIA and JUCO college coaches. Schools interested in subscribing, please call Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Dinos Trigonis at (562) 223-0190. Trigonis can also be reached by e-mail: trigonis30@aol.com
The 2011-2012 Fullcourt Subscription includes 5 reports and 2 coaches phone directories for a fee of $495. To sign up on-line, click here.
College coaches interested in receiving sample reports can receive one by e-mailing at: trigonis30@aol.com. To visit the website go to: www.fullctpress.net
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WHAT RECRUITERS/SCOUTS ARE SAYING ABOUT THE FULLCOURT PRESS
“Fullcourt Press is one of the most detailed scouting services that I have seen and it’s evaluation of prospects is excellent” * Head Coach – Pac-10 program
“When it comes to Southern California HS and JC recruiting, the Fullcourt Press is second to none with respect to the quality of its evaluation and providing coaches the critical info they need to recruit effectively. If you are interested in recruiting Southern California, Fullcourt Press is a must!
* Clark Francis – Hoop Scoop (Hoopscooponline.com)
“Fullcourt Press is one of the best scouting reports that I have ever seen” - Head Coach – ACC school
High School Juniors, Sophomores, Freshmen and their parent(s) or guardian(s): For more information click here.
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For the first time since AAU began offering basketball leagues and tournaments in 1896, the AAU is offering a skills academy and national ranking for individual athletes. The AAU All-American Basketball Skills Academy will have a boys and girls Junior Division (3-8th grade) and a Senior Division (9-11th grade). The inaugural 2011 AAU All-American Senior Boys and Girls teams will be named in April 2011. The Top 100 rankings by grade for underclass boys and girls will be announced at the end of the summer based upon Academy evaluations. |
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Life Tools Training | |
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Combine Testing and Measurements | |
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Fundamental Basketball Training | |
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Organized Games and Contests. | |
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REGISTER TODAY AT WWW.AAUALLAMERICAN.COM
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| Former NBA All Star, Olympic Gold Medalist and AAU All-American Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway stated, "The AAU basketball program was the foundation for my career in basketball. It allowed all of the elite players in my city to unite and showcase our athletic talent to college coaches. As the Skills Academy Director of Player Personnel, I want to help the AAU develop our next generation of AAU All-American Student Athletes." | ||