For this age group, the recruiting picture is really starting to clear up. Elite players have been in the top invite-only tournaments and have a ton of high level AAU experience. Offers have started going out, personal invitations have been made to camps, and coaches at the top programs have a pretty good idea of who they want to recruit. Players have started to separate themselves.
That said, basketball recruiting has a trickle-down effect, meaning that as the top programs such as Michigan State or Syracuse narrow down their lists, recruits should figure that out and start looking elsewhere. One of the biggest mistakes recruits make at this stage is to still hold on that they’ll play for a Sweet 16 mainstay when in reality that program has no intention to offer them any funding at all. It’s time for every single HS basketball player with aspirations of playing in college to get their viewership-enabled skills video out to as many programs as possible. The less you’ve heard from coaches, the more schools you should be sending your profile and viewership-enabled video out to at this point. If you’ve been going to camps and playing on AAU teams for 2 or 3 summers now and didn’t get a big stack of letters or any emails from coaches throughout your junior year, don’t expect different recruiting results by doing the same thing again in the summer between your sophomore and junior year.
Sending your profile and viewership-enabled video to schools at the right level will help you drive results. Playing on AAU teams will make you a better player, but they won’t always make you a better recruit. As you’ve hopefully learned by now, all of these different activities haven’t brought you enough recruiting results on their own. If you aren’t getting recruited heavily now, don’t do the same things over and over again and expect a different result. That’s the definition of recruiting insanity!
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