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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Your son is a 2011, so since Sept 1 they are allowed to be fairly direct: "You have been recommended to us as a player with the potential to play college baseball. We would like to begin the recruiting process...we want you to consider College X as a top choice" etc. But even those letters get sent out to a lot of potential recruits and can look like a form letter.
Questionnaires we take seriously, and he completes them and sends them back, even if it's not a place 2B is interested in right now. They wouldn't send those if they weren't interested at some level, and it's just polite. (Of course there are blue chippers who get tons of these and don't fill them all out, but that is not the case with us!) Camp invites, not so much. But if he is interested in that particular school, then we still consider going to the camp if we can do it. You never know what might result.
Yes, in my opinion it is absolutely appropriate to ask for feedback on camp participation. Many camps provide an evaluation as part of the package.
My feeling is that if he is interested in the school, even if it is a form letter or a camp invite, then follow up! Good luck!
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| Posts: 770 | Location: Gainesville, FL | Registered: August 07, 2007 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Camps can get expensive, but we found them a good vehicle for getting a more "up close and personal" look at the coaches, the facilities, the campuses and the culture of the programs during the junior year fall, so that we could figure out what schools we wanted to target. We went to camps only at schools that met son's academic AND baseball goals.
Many camps promise that you'll get a written evaluation. If they make that promise, don't leave the camp without it in hand. If they don't promise one, then an e-mail expressing interest in the camp but asking if an evaluation will be provided is entirely proper. Because they want you and your money to come to the camp, they will likely cooperate with a polite request.
When you are standing on their soil, they can talk to you for as long as they are interested in talking to you. If they talk a lot, that indicates interest. If they seem in a hurry to move on, that can also be meaningful. Especially if they've already seen you in action at that point (hitting, fielding, pitching or whatever).
The key thing is to determine what schools interest YOU. Then be proactive. Try to elicit interest from the schools you want. You're a year away from your NLI signing period. You have time to shoot for exactly what YOU want right now. If for some reason those schools don't seem interested, there's plenty of time to adopt a fall back plan -- seeing if anyone's interested at all -- much later on.
I don't see any point in going to paid camps at schools you don't care about. Choose just a few, if even that.
If your son starts getting invited to "junior days" over the winter, great. If his whole junior season passes without anyone seeming all that interested, then maybe that will be the time to broaden the search and try to get more people to look at him over next summer.
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| Posts: 3163 | Location: Virginia | Registered: February 01, 2006 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer
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First, understand that schools vary in their approach and the urgency with which they try to lock up players. Broadly speaking, upper level D1 schools are already courting 2011 players. Some of these schools have already received verbal commitments. Mid level D1 schools who play in mid level conferences typically haven't pushed hard yet. Lower level schools will wait longer yet, the better to see which players are available.
Regarding camps: Yes, participation at East Cobb is one way to get on mailing lists. A camp invitation is a good thing, and it is one way for a school to gauge the player's interest. It is also provides a reason for the player to call or email the coaches, and startup communication. However, the camp invitation that tends to show real interest on the part of a school is one that doesn't even appear on the school's website, or if it does, there is no way to sign up. These camps are quite nominal in cost (maybe $65/day), and promise no coaches from other schools. Many upper level D1 schools have these camps.
Players who are in the top handfull of players that a high level D1 school wants already have direct communication going on with the coaches. But players who are just outside that group may have had no contact at all. So a player who isn't in contact with coaches now should expect that he isn't a top choice. But he could be close.
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| Posts: 1002 | Location: Belmont, CA | Registered: April 01, 2006 |    |
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