https://www.sportsforceonline....08b24287a275cf6b0819
This article brings up a subject that I've had to deal with during my son's recruitment. We live in Colorado who has very limited D1 baseball opportunities and very limited reciprocal financial agreements with other states. Setting aside Air Force for obvious reasons, Colorado has ONE D1 baseball program - Northern Colorado. Neither the U of Colorado or Colorado State have baseball programs. What does this mean for us? It means that school budgets come into play. I'll give you the best example.
My so is quite interested in the University of Arkansas for a number of personal reasons. Resident tuition for the school is just over $8k / yr. Non-resident tuition is just over $23k / yr. Arkansas has reciprocal tuition deals with every boarder state as well as Kansas and Illinois. Kids from those states can enter Arkansas and pay basically 110% of in-state tuition. The program has, of course, 11,7 scholarships available, but they also have a recruiting budget. So, if they are looking at filling a spot and are looking at my son and a kid from Missouri, they have to take into account that a, say 50% offer, will cost them almost $12k from their operating budget per year for my kid, but only just over $4.5k/yr to get the Missouri kid. So, if there is enough talent in that region, my son would need to be significantly better than other options for offering him to make sense. It would also make sense that they would wait longer to make that decision.
For us, I'm starting to see, then, just how important it is to target schools that have significantly better opportunities for fee waivers or non-resident scholarships. For Colorado, there is a program that includes several Western Schools that allow a student to attend from out-of-state for 150% of in-state tuition. That makes him more attractive to a coach. Other schools have great fee waivers for out-of-state students who meet certain benchmarks. Some Texas schools, for example, waive the difference between in-state and non-resident tuition for any student who receives at least $1k in scholarship money from a source that any Texas student could have competed for.
Another factor is private schools. While at first glance, the high cost looks like a negative factor, the actuality can be quite different. Many of the private schools have large grants that allow them to give financial aid to a large number of students - often students from families that you would not think of as financial need types. I believe Stanford, for example, gives the full amount of tuition to any student from a family that has a household income below $125K.
It's certainly a bigger factor in targeting your recruiting efforts than most people recognize.