My company - Tudor Collegiate Strategies - works with colleges around the country, teaching coaches & admissions to recruit more effectively. #OurClientsWin
This is resonating with a ton of college coaches - and I think it will with you, too:
"THE GOOD PROBLEMS TO HAVE IN RECRUITING"
👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
https://t.co/FONjwzz9Ko
In the most simple terms: For those incoming 2026 class members and current athletes who did not exhaust eligibility this past year, schools will apply the model that benefits them the most.
For those enrolling in fall of 2027, schools will apply the new age-based model.
In non-Brendan Sorsby news: @YahooSports has obtained a copy of the revised Cruz-Cantwell bill ahead of Thursday's markup, which features a notable change:
Schools earning at least $80M in revenue are required to maintain current scholarship/roster levels for non-rev sports.
Have you been following our 7-part series on first contacts with your new prospects?
Next Monday is a big day...get ready for it with better prep and insights on what works:
WATCH HERE:
https://t.co/LBgy853DgI
نحن بصدد مشاهدة أكثر قصص كأس العالم 2026 غرابة.. سكان بلدة لاورنس بكانساس تتجند كلها لتشجيع المنتخب الجزائري الذي حل ببلدتهم، الأمر لم يقتصر على شراء الأوشحة وحضور التدريبات، بل الأمر وصل لحفظ النشيد الوطني الجزائري
هذه ليست أمريكا التي نعرفها!
John Calipari, who has been on the Hill lobbying for Congressional involvement, pens a letter to US Senators over legislation, co-signed by several others and supported by the coaches association.
Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua, who used to run NBC Sports, tells senators that the best way to make the most money from TV rights is a super league.
Then he says he doesn't want a super league.
Then he offers a sample super league schedule.
A PARENT’S JOURNEY THROUGH YOUTH SPORTS:
Age 5: “He’s got a cannon.”
Age 6: “He’s the fastest kid out there. Coach said so.”
Age 7: “Rec ball isn’t challenging him anymore.”
Age 8: “We tried out for select. Obviously made it.”
Age 9: “$2,800 for the season. Plus uniforms. Plus tournaments. Plus hotels.”
Age 10: “Cooperstown is basically a family vacation, right?”
Age 11: “He needs a hitting guy. And a pitching guy. And probably a mental performance coach.”
Age 12: “I’m not a crazy sports parent. The OTHER parents are crazy.”
Age 13: “We changed schools. For academics. (And also baseball.)”
Age 14: “Showcases are a requirement at this age.”
Age 15: “Ya his ranking just ticked up. We’re cooking.”
Age 16: “He just needs to get seen by the right school.”
Age 17: “The D1 schools want him to walk on. He’ll earn a spot by sophomore year.”
Age 18: “Okay, D2 is actually really competitive.”
Age 19: “He’s redshirting. Strategic.”
Age 20: “He’s focusing on school now.”
Age 21: “You know what? He’s so much happier.”
Roughly 7% of high schoolers play in college.
About 1.5% of those get drafted.
Less than half of draftees ever play one day in the big leagues.
The odds of our kids going pro are somewhere between “struck by lightning” and “find a $100 in old shorts.”
I love youth sports (all my kids play a bunch of them) just keep a good perspective my friends. ✌️
Is dramatic change afoot?
SEC presidents saw multiple future governance models this week. A “mid-summer” decision date looms.
“We start with governing ourselves and not worry what other leagues are doing. I’m not afraid to look at collective bargaining.”
https://t.co/pUbnCu9RUP
What's the right way to achieve consistent prospect recruiting communication?
Dan Tudor explores this topic in this good article >> https://t.co/BTjdgm2hPk
- from @DanTudor