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Old Fogie ... errr, Fungo ... ummm, Highly Regarded and Beloved Old Timer 

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A lot of people will disagree with me but I’m used to that. Put the shoe on the other foot. Which would you rather receive FROM a coach? I have talked to a number of recruits and parents that always point out the coach personally called or they describe how they covet the “hand-written” letter as if were some type of trophy. If you want to make an impression with the coach, make the contact as personal as possible. #1 Face-to-face, #2 Telephone conversation, #3 Hand written letter, #4 Typed letter, and lastly coming in at #5, the lowly email. If the email comes up last on my list, why would a coach say he prefers the email? Pure and simple; he is eliminating your ability to exert any of your emotions on him. He WANTS to make his decisions based on what HE considers important. Recruiting is much like selling and buying. Depending on the player’s talent determines whether you are a buyer or seller. The situations are COMPLETELY different with the blue chip player and an average and the marginal player. If you are trying to “sell” your son you need get pro-active and get personal! IMHO, Fungo
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| Posts: 4962 | Location: Spring Creek (Jackson),Tennessee | Registered: December 26, 2002 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Fungo - I pretty much agree with you and was a bit surprised to hear their answer re/ emails/regular mail. But their reasons were that they get 30-100 snail-mails a week which get backlogged tremendously, but just a few emails. Maybe after this thread they'll get 100's of both...don't know. I know I respond to email better than regular mail. In any case...agree totally that a phone call is best. And I also agree with your logic re/ buyers versus sellers.
----------------------- Go Bearcats!
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| Posts: 3675 | Location: California | Registered: June 22, 2003 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Cosmos - While I certainly don't doubt your story, I would be a little careful taking its advice. Our experience was this...IF you are interested in a school, TELL THEM! If you DON'T tell them, they ?may? assume you are not interested and may move onto someone else...even if you're a blue chip recruit. Schools that return very few phone calls lose out on recruits. There's no doubt they get too many...but that wouldn't stop me from contacting them and giving them a chance to return the call/email or not.
----------------------- Go Bearcats!
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| Posts: 3675 | Location: California | Registered: June 22, 2003 |    |
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HSBBWeb Old Timer

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Fungo, Not quite sure how to decipher your response. We actually never had to email or mail in anything other than the original questionaire. And if contact was made, it was always to the recruiting coach, as that was his job, most Head Coaches (in the bigger schools) give them the emails, letters, etc. That's their job. After July 1, when the Head Coach calls you kind of get the jist the level of interest. I can not speak for the D2,D3 or smaller D1 schools. At one of the schools my son wanted to attend (not the one he signed with) he would call the office administrator and she would tell him when it was best to get him (not the Head Coach) in the office and 9 times out of 10 she was correct. Just another suggestion on how to go about getting contact. I can tell you another thing, coaches not usually interested in stats, more like CHP (can he play), velocity, types of pitches and grade GPA's. I am speaking from a pitchers standpoint. Not sure what tehy base their riteria on for position players. JMO
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| Posts: 11027 | Location: South Florida | Registered: July 28, 2003 |    |
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