College recruiting

Blue chip athletes often end recruiting with a hat selection ceremony in which they make a verbal commitment.

In college athletics in the United States, recruiting is the process in which college coaches add prospective student athletes to their roster each off-season. This process typically culminates in a coach extending an athletic scholarship offer to a player who is about to be a junior in high school or higher. There are instances, mostly at lower division universities, where no athletic scholarship can be awarded and where the player pays for tuition, housing, and textbook costs out of pocket or from financial aid.[1] During this recruiting process, schools must comply with rules that define who may be involved in the recruiting process, when recruiting may occur and the conditions under which recruiting may be conducted. Recruiting rules seek, as much as possible, to control intrusions into the lives of prospective student-athletes. The NCAA defines recruiting as “any solicitation of prospective student-athletes or their parents by an institutional staff member or by a representative of the institution’s athletics interests for the purpose of securing a prospective student-athlete’s enrollment and ultimate participation in the institution’s intercollegiate athletics program."[2]

  1. ^ Renick, Jobaynn (2012). "The Use and Misuse of College Athletics". The Journal of Higher Education. 45 (7): 550. doi:10.2307/1980793. JSTOR 1980793.
  2. ^ "NCAA". Recruiting. Archived from the original on 2012-04-17. Retrieved 2012-04-18.

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