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I wanted to give my thoughts on HeadFirst. We traveled to Long Island last week from Southern California. As many have commented on these boards before, the camp was outstanding. My son kept commenting that it was fast-paced, the between game "seminars" were great, etc. Of the 250 or so players, I believe 10 were from CA. Some of my impressions:

There were a lot of kids who could really swing the bat.

There were a lot of "athletes", big kids with speed.

The coaches were extremely engaged, very active and pro-active in the recruiting process. They were there to find and engage players, hunting players down to talk after seeing them perform.

The baseball Heaven facility is very nice.

For a pitcher (my son attended as a pitcher only) the event afforded tremendous exposure, and the layout of the diamonds and advanced posting of game schedules/pitching rotations seemed to make it extremely easy for a large amount of coaches to rotate among fields and see every pitcher they wanted to.

I cannot stress how highly I would recommend a HeadFirst event for any solid HS player who meets their niche target market: Solidly-skilled players (do not need to be a superstar), who are high achieving academically, who are targeting mainly D3 opportunities.
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We went to HeadFirst last year as a junior and recently to Long Island. We have the same raving reviews to give this year as we did last year, although this year came with many additional benefits.
They at HeadFirst get it! They run the showcase efficiently and effectively. Most important of all is how accessible the coaches are to both players and parents. That may be the biggest advantage they have over the others. For the pitchers only, there were plenty of things during the hitting and fielding showcase times to keep them busy. The coaches span a variety of many schools with many levels of play. The coaches have the academic information of the players, apparently, to know who they should approach. Other showcases and camps should take note.

The Headfirst camp had at least 70 coaches from top academic schools from the Northeast, as advertised.  A virtually who's who of the US News and World Report.  There are not many major conference D1 though, (as I only saw Duke, Virginia, Boston College and Villanova).  Drills and games are very similar to other major camps, but much better run and organized than any camp we have attended, (other than Stanford camp).  If interested in getting recruited by top academic schools, and you have the talent, it is well worth the time and money.  

OK, another Headfirst Long Island is in the books.  I’m wondering if this camp will make sense for my 2015 next summer.  I have a feeling that he’ll be borderline academically.   He hasn’t taken the SAT or ACT yet.  I don’t think Headfirst has a recommended minimum GPA or test scores.  Is there anyone out there who regrets sending their son to Headfirst because he really wasn’t qualified academically?

Originally Posted by MidAtlanticDad:

OK, another Headfirst Long Island is in the books.  I’m wondering if this camp will make sense for my 2015 next summer.  I have a feeling that he’ll be borderline academically.   He hasn’t taken the SAT or ACT yet.  I don’t think Headfirst has a recommended minimum GPA or test scores.  Is there anyone out there who regrets sending their son to Headfirst because he really wasn’t qualified academically?

Why would you send your kid to a camp to get looks in front of schools that would not be able to admit him?  Schools will lower their normal standards for athletes, but only so far.  If you have a questions as to whether your son could be accepted look at list of schools that attended and contact the schools of interest.  If your son's numbers are not high enough it would be a waste of time to attend..

MidAtlanticDad,

 

FWIW....I also have a 2015 academic borderline kid that I'm considering for HeadFirst next year.  I've already told him he doesn't have the grades for a majority of these schools and he has not taken the SAT/ACT yet.  I expect HeadFirst to be in the same $1000 neighborhood in next year.  While expensive, the showcase has significant value as we have seen with our older sons.   So, the gauntlet has been put down to him this academic year.  His choices are to :

 

1)improve his grades and nail his SAT/ACT so Mom and Dad pick it up the tab,

2)pay for it himself

3)look at other showcases.  

 

HeadFirst is not a right, it is a privilege and it must be earned as it was with his older brothers.  He's quickly learning that a strategy and plan has to be in place before Mom and Dad start writing checks.

 

 

Aleebaba,

That's a reasonable recommendation, and may end up being his strategy.  If I do send him to Headfirst (son always pays a portion of the fee), it will be for the personal contact with coaches.

In my limited experience with recruiting, it reminds me of searching for a job.  Resumes and research are important, but it usually comes down to a personal connection.  Coaches seem to rely heavily on their instincts.  When they see a kid on the field, they know very quickly whether or not they like him.  (One of my favorite movie lines is “Ugly girlfriend means no confidence.” from Moneyball.)

The timing is also a big factor.  Son has a wide-ranging  list of schools, but he's been focused on the ones that may end up being out of his reach (baseball-wise).  If he hasn't found a home by next August, I know he will be much more receptive to schools that were further down the list (or not even on it).  At that point you’re running out of time for research and camps.  If just a handful of the 70-odd schools at Headfirst think they can make both the baseball and academics work, then I’d be happy with the investment.

fenwaysouth,

More great advice.  It makes me think about setting a target SAT and/or ACT score connected to Headfirst.  Current thinking is for him to take the March SAT, and the June ACT.


Thank you, both.

Originally Posted by MidAtlanticDad:

  If I do send him to Headfirst (son always pays a portion of the fee), it will be for the personal contact with coaches.

In my limited experience with recruiting, it reminds me of searching for a job.  Resumes and research are important, but it usually comes down to a personal connection.  Coaches seem to rely heavily on their instincts. 

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The main problem is that if he does not have the grades, the Coach does not have the ability to get him in through admissions, (no matter how talented baseball wise).  However, you may be right that there would be a few schools at Headfirst that would have more influence in the selection process, especially if your son stands out baseball wise.  I don't know.

 

As for other camps, we have only been to this camp, the Stanford camp, and PG Academic -- and I agree that Headfirst had the most of any camp we attended.  Not sure what else would compare, although people have told me the Fall tournament in Jupiter is packed with college scouts.

 

Son went to session 2 last week.  60 times were up since they were run in the rain.  My son told me only 3 times run under 7.0 in session 2.  A little disappointed that Princeton, Cornell, Penn, and Brown were not there.  However, the D3 interest he has received in the days after is off the charts. Schools he had never considered from the midwest (Chicago, Macalaster, Grinnell) have all contacted him.  May be planning a fall midwest tour around the Giants Bears Thursday night game in Chicago if it comes to that.

Penn, Princeton, Columbia, and Dartmouth were at all of the sessions. I noticed one of the Dartmouth assistants in street clothes all week.  Princeton coach was wearing a golf club hat and not all Princeton gear.  Coaches that are being payed are supposed to be in uniform but it doesn't always seem to be the case, especially on day two.  Some coaches, who are not being payed, hang around in street clothes.

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