NCAA and NAIA College Baseball Recruiting Process

These baseball recruiting guidelines will help guide you through the recruiting process to get recruited and find a baseball scholarship. As a baseball recruit, get in front of college coaches to help get a baseball scholarship. Our recruiting service helps increase your odds of getting a scholarship.

Recruit possibilities are within the NCAA guidelines, but don't forget NAIA guidelines and NJCAA guidelines.

"The barking dog gets attention", this old saying really comes into the light when talking about college baseball recruiting. With over 400,000 high school baseball players you can see how difficult it is for a college coach to find, evaluate and choose the best qualified athlete for each position on the baseball team. If a coach can't hear or see you, you will never have a chance with that coach. There are over 2300 college baseball coaches, how many come to your high school? If you are proactive (the barking dog) your chances of getting recruited go up dramatically. Our recruiting service helps better your odds of getting a scholarship

To get recruited for baseball your best chances are to connect with those that supply high school sports recruiting services. It is rare for a college coach to send a baseball recruiter to your highschool to check out your athletic abilities. College baseball recruiters get most of their recruits from baseball recruiting services like us. So the simple answer to "how to get recruited for baseball" so you have the chance to follow your dreams of playing baseball in college is to be proactive and get your parents involved in hs baseball recruiting as well.

With so many recruit prospects, college coaches must use position planning boards and why the more you know about the baseball recruiting process (including position planning boards) the better your scholarship odds will be.

Know the scholarship facts about baseball recruiting and what goes on in the baseball recruiting process and how to work it into your plan will move you ahead dramatically. Talented athletes who fail here usually end their career on their last high school baseball game.

Why some great athletes never get a D1, D2 or NAIA athletic scholarship

1. Athlete didn't start their recruiting process early enough. As an underclassman most don't even thinks about a scholarship or don't think they are good enough. Coaches understand that you will get better every year. You need to understand your need to build relationships early with as many coaches as possible.

2. Parents are not involved. If they are not on board then work hard on your relationship to get their help.

3. Grades. If they would have started the scholarship recruiting process early they would have learned what it takes academically and adjusted along the way.

4. Not proactive. Many athletes and parents are told college coaches will find you. Well how many of the 2300+ coaches come to your school. When is the last time you shook hands with a college coach at your game? If you want to go somewhere then do something to help yourself.

5. Not sure you are good enough? A. Bottom line is it is the coach that makes the decision, not your friend, high school coach, parents, nor anyone else. B. There are over 2300 college baseball coaches, get them to notice you and you will have a chance.

Where and how to Start the baseball Recruiting Process

Note that coaches are restricted from contacting athletes until their junior year of high school. This does not stop athletes that want a scholarship and willing to work for it.

A workaround to the restriction and the most successful method is to be proactive in the recruiting process, contacting coaches on their own, attending combines and camps, and creating an profile(s) on the web.

Below is the information that all coaches will be looking at before they even consider recruiting an athlete.

Coaches want to see how an athlete performs

Don't wait for a college coach to show up at a game to watch you. One chances are they don't know you exist and two, do you think that is the most efficient use of the coaches time?

Again, be proactive. Every recruit, including you, must have a highlight video so a coach can make a quick evaluation and they may ask for a full-game film.

You need something to send to coaches, an Athletic Resume

This should include all of the above plus your contact information, academic information and what ever lets the coach know more about you. . It is easy to do, after all it's about you.

Times have changed, the vast majority of coaches begin their recruiting process online, after all it is efficient. So get on line and get it done. All you need to do is click on the "Increase your scholarship odd!" button, create an account for your recruiting profile for free. Add all your information online including list your upcoming games and camps where they can watch you. Keep it current as things change.

Once you have an your recruiting profile account we will show you how easy it is to be proactive and get noticed by thousands of baseball coaches.

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Recruiting Guidelines, by position, what college coaches look for

Catcher, Pitcher, Short Stop, 2nd Base, Center Field are usually occupied by the team's best athletes. When recruiters and scouts come to a game they usually look up the center of the field unless they come to see a specific player who may be on the corners.

Recruiting is not necessarily about game performance. Many will just watch the pregame warm up where they are guaranteed to see the player make a play. He watches the fluidity, the softness of the hands, the footwork, velocity which the player throws and his accuracy. If a coach want to see a whole game they will be looking for ATTITUDE and HUSTLE that leads by example and be motivated to play at his ability level.

Regardless of position, batting skills will always help after all it is the number of runs that wins the game.

Catcher

Catchers must be able to block a thrown ball, in the dirt and is one of the potentially game saving skills your need. Picking off a runner off third base is risky but can produce an out and save a run if you don't overthrow. Coaches will look at arm strength shown while throwing to 2nd and 3rd base and throw mechanics they possess.

Pitcher

The fastball velocity with consistently throw at that velocity. Have a repertoire of pitches. Holding runners close to the bag for fear of being picked off. You don't need to pick off a lot of runners, just put the fear in them. This gives runners less of a jump on a batted ball, increase the chances for double plays, and improve the catcher's throw out steal attempts to lower the ERA.

First Baseman

Scouts and recruiters looking for recruits to play 1st base ideally will find a tall person along with quick versatility and a the ability make quick decisions when the baseball is put into the field of play. The 1st baseman will typically possess excellent mobility and can stretch out to make the catch before the runner gets to the base. Make it easy for the umpire to make a good call. A good skill to have is the scoop play in which the ball is normally grabbed on a hop well before it reaches the player. Other skill is power hitting to drive runs in.

Second Baseman

The 2nd baseman is the cut off man on balls hit deep to right field and right center,. It is their job to be the relay to the designated base. They should listen to the catcher on where to throw the ball. The second baseman needs to play the ball in a strong throwing position. As the ball approaches, the fielder turns their feet sideways and catches the ball beside them, allowing for a quick transition to throwing.

Short stop

Simply put feet, hands, and throwing arm (in that order). Holding runners close to the base is more of an art form than it is a practice-made-perfect skill. Good shortstops know how to catch the attention of the base runner, with movement and sound, at just the right time. If you distract the runner, cause them to place attention on the shortstop, then you create the possibility of a pick play with the second basemen, or force the runner to retreat a step or two towards the bag, making them less of a scoring threat.

Tactics include put the runner at ease by starting a short and slow movement just as the runner glances in your direction, then stopping, then when the runner looks away, make your quick movement towards the bag. Cause the runner to shorten up their lead. Alternate between a deep and shallow position, so that the runner is constantly searching for your location

Third baseman

Difficult plays in baseball. 1) The backhand play down the third base line is difficult to make and come up throwing overhand to first. 2) A bunted ball or chopped ball on a full swing, the slow roller is also difficult, how ever you end up fielding the ball, charge the ball hard and then break down to short steps with proper timing, prior to fielding the ball.

Skills, arm strength for high velocity throws and footwork moving side to side quickly to cover a lot of ground at third base. Also show the ability to hit for power and average.

Also communicate with your catcher, find out from the catcher how a pitcher is throwing. If the pitcher is sharp and fast, move off the foul line and help cut off balls hit towards the shortstop. If the pitcher is not fast that day expect almost anything coming your way.

Outfield - center (centerfielder)

Know batters, and their hitting tendencies can improve positioning. Communication with your infielders can also assist in the positioning to a more likely spot. The infield can relay the catcher's pitch call to you, then you subtly shift according to the pitch and pitch location. The centerfielder is very fast with a strong arm. You must be a leader and communicate with the other outfielders and middle infielders.

Outfield - left and right

Posses the strengths of the center fielder while handling situation for your position. Like a right fielder taking a line drive off field hit slicing to the corner off the bat of a right handed hitter.

Baseball Recruiting Services

Not all sports recruiting services are alike so compare before you spend your hard earned money. Bottom line, if you want to get recruited for a baseball scholarship you must get noticed by college coaches and it is logical that a recruiting service like eScout4u, who can get your baseball profile in front of 2300+ college baseball coaches, is the best recruiting service choice for you future.

Increase you recruiting odds of getting a baseball scholarship

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References

Recruit possibilities are within the NCAA guidelines, but don't forget NAIA guidelines and NJCAA guidelines.

Author: Don Sprowl

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Important to both parents and athletes! Increases the chances of being recruited and getting a scholarship by understanding these unspoken college recruiting facts if you really want to play at the next level with a scholarship!

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