US College Soccer Scholarship & Recruiting Tutorial
What you'll learn
- Student's will be able to find the best college soccer fit & soccer scholarship opportunities
- Student's will be able to identify 50 colleges that provide free on-campus try-outs and others where an iD camp fee is necessary
- Students will be able to apply a recruiting strategy to meet their specific goals and interests
- Students will be able to compare and contrast the various models of college athletics & recognize red flags of the recruiting process
Requirements
- No college soccer knowledge or experience is required
Description
If you're interested in playing inter-collegiate soccer in the US, this tutorial walks you through the entire recruiting process. It will enable you to identify the best college for you with considerations for soccer scholarships, which colleges allow try-outs, recruiting rules and how to communicate with college coaches. It will also identify 50 colleges in the US for you to consider with the following factors in mind:
• Athletic scholarships
• Roster size
• Location
• Possibility of trying out with the team to be assessed by the head coach for a scholarship and roster spot.
• Ease of admission and transfer acceptance.
At the conclusion of this course you will be able to find the best college fit to meet your soccer goals and academic objectives. Firstly, it will identify which colleges provide the most soccer scholarships, then provide you with a recruiting strategy to communicate with college coaches.
You will also be able to identify which college soccer pathways is the best fit for you, and answer all of your questions pertaining to rules, how to communicate with college coaches, which colleges allow on-campus try-outs, and how to maximize your soccer scholarship opportunities
Too many student-athletes make college soccer decisions without knowing the pit-falls and red flags of the recruiting process. For example, this tutorial will reveal a university in the US that has 66 players on its men’s soccer team and 61 players on its women’s soccer team. Crucially, the college coach wants to get to know you during the recruiting process, and why you want to play college soccer. If you were the coach investing hundreds of thousands of scholarship dollars, wouldn’t you want to investigate the character of your incoming players? I’m not convinced that paying thousands of dollars to a third party is the wisest method to achieve this. Afterall, US college soccer is an amateur sport, so it’s much better for you to contact the coach directly, and I’ll explain how to do this.
I will also provide specific advice for International players, and illustrates how to arrange your try-out here in the States without having to pay thousands of Euro’s or Pounds in Recruiting Service Fees. For international students, some colleges allow you to arrange free on-campus try-outs, and others you’ll pay an iD camp fee, and I will explain all of these pathways. Finally, I will identify 50 colleges to consider if you wish to try-out for a soccer scholarship here in the States, and how to communicate with the college coach to coordinate this.
Who this course is for:
- Soccer players & coaches who are interested in playing college soccer in the United States
Instructor
Paul Sapsford serves as Director of College Soccer Academy & tenured faculty at a California Community College. His undergraduate thesis examined the Home Advantage in Professional Soccer and was conducted with first team professionals at Wimbledon FC and Crystal Palace FC. He lectured in the field of Sport Psychology at Saint Mary’s University College (UK), and collaborated on research into the FIFA Experiment on Semi-Professional soccer which was later published in the Journal of Sports Sciences. His post graduate studies at Exeter University (UK) and Saint Mary’s College of California culminated in his thesis on the relationship between coaching behavior, collective efficacy and team cohesion. He holds a USSF “A” License and has coached D1 NCAA athletics at both Stanford University and Saint Mary’s College of California. While at Stanford he guided the Cardinal women’s soccer team to an elite eight finish in the 2002 NCAA playoffs and was named National Coach of the Year by Soccer America for this achievement. He also served Northern California as Director of Coaching, where he specialized in sport science and coach education.