Originally Posted by Dadofa17:
Originally Posted by CaCO3Girl:
Originally Posted by TPM:
Originally Posted by CaCO3Girl:
TPM-If your kid is a talented short short I don't see the problem with dreaming of him being the next Jeter. The likelihood is 99.99999% against them becoming that, but someone will.
Golfman25, I agree! It really should be against the rules to offer to anyone below 10th grade, and I think 10th grade is pushing it! How can these schools possibly know what these kids will be doing in 3 or 4 years, what will their body type be, what will their GPA's be, what will their ability be?!!?!??! It seems ridiculous to offer to anyone in 8th grade and yet major programs are. This is why I think an influx of middle school parents looking at the next level will be on the rise on this board.
Again, what major programs are you refering to? I know others are getting info from PG site but do you know anyone directly? What coaches are recruiting 8th and 9th graders?
My kid dreamed of being the next Greg Maddux. I let him dream.
Me, I was the grounded one who made sure he went to school and got good grades that helped pay for his college education.
I personally know one kid who was heavily recruited in 9th grade and committed the summer between 9th and 10th, but I have heard of several others. I also know that several 14u and under teams have websites listing all the kids names, numbers, and the head coaches phone number is also listed. I don't think that is so people can set up a slumber party.
As for the who is recruiting, according to this thread "Arizona State, USC, and Miss. St, MSU, LSU, Texas AM and Florida St, UVA and Virginia Tech, Miami, Florida, UCLA, and Vanderbilt" and multiple people on this thread have described contact prior to the kid stepping foot on a high school baseball field.
Although there may be a few pre high school commitments, i don't think it is happening as much as some people may think. My son plays for a top national team out to Georgia. (ranked in the top 10 by PG). At the beginning of 10th grade, no one on the team had committed. Sure, some had started talking to schools, but that was it. Now, by the end of the summer between 10th and 11th, about a third of the team has committed. I expect most of the players to have offers this fall. Some may take them and others may still wait.
I went to a very reliable source regarding 2018 commitments (that would be the year referred to). These are usually players seen often and have most likely made the varsity team in 9th grade. The commitment comes in as a sophomore which was stated here, I get that.
I also agree that this is NOT the norm (as was told to me as well), but offered to players that are exceptional with projection and the coach sees that for one reason or another. Also a plus if the player has one or two parents that have attended that school. And there ARE special funds available at amny programs for these players, so a 25% offer combined with these type of funds can work. These players do not usually end up coming to college.
Giving early offers to pitchers is a good thing, the pitcher and his parents understand that they have to follow certain rules to keep them healthy. It doesnt happen often but the incentive helps. Position players, those Bryce Harper types get nice offers, but their projection is a bit more difficult. This is my understanding.
Most programs do not begin recruiting until the player is in HS, maybe they are familiar with them from a camp and from someone else I spoke to that is usually the norm for top conference players. Keep in mind many many kids begin attending big D1 camp programs while very young, and if the coach is still around, that is a big plus.
I did ask here where the info came from 8th graders getting recruited, I never got an answer but my understanding is that it just rarely applies.
As far as advice given to parents who come here looking for info on their 9th grader being recruited and offered, many of these players get advice through their coaches that they play for (top programs) and some already have advisors (not necessary). So as far as updating advice on being recruited at such a young age, I doubt that it would apply to most who come here.
Would I ever advise anyone to have their 9th grader to commit for 25%? If I could afford it, maybe, but if my player shows that much talent, he deserves to be rewarded for that, so my answer would be no. Also remember, if this player will project later for the draft after HS, I want his scholarship to be a major point in the process, 75-80% is better than 25% and that would be full COA,not just tuition.
JMO