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Boston Area Diving
You're a high school senior and you are interested in diving in college.
You want to use your diving to either get into a better school or get a
college scholarship, but you don't know where to begin. Here are a few
hints to help you on your way.
What's the difference between Divisions I, II and III?
How do I begin the process?
First, you need to narrow down your selection of schools by
going through your college guides and finding schools that offer the
academic curriculum you are looking for as well as a swimming and diving
program. Register with the
NCAA Clearinghouse, forms can be found on the NCAA.org web site.
Read the
Guide for the College-Bound Student-Athlete. This is a very
important publication for all high-school athletes preparing to compete
at the college level. This book summarizes the rules and regulations in
an easy-to-read form. You should have this process complete by the start
of your junior year. During your junior year, write a "dear coach"
letter - a letter of introduction stating that you are interested in the
college. Include information about yourself and your diving (name of
high school and club team), and a little bit about your academics so
that they know whether you are academically eligible. Also, be sure to
include your year in high school, mailing address, phone number and an
e-mail address. If you receive a positive response from the coach, send
a follow-up letter to confirm your interest. NCAA coaches can not call
you until the end of your Junior year. Juniors may call the coaches and
talk with them if you reach them. They may not
initiate the call or even return your call. Coaches may write or
email you during your Junior year, so if you do call and do not reach
them, leave an email address. Also, keep in mind that March is a busy
month for college coaches due to championship meets.
How do I arrange a visit to the college?
There are two types of visits - the first is an unofficial
visit. This is where you and the coach make arrangements to meet and you
pay your own way, you can take as many unofficial visits as you want.
The second type of visit is an
official visit. An official visit typically takes place in the fall
of your senior year. An official visit occurs anytime the college or
coach expends funds on any aspect of your visit - this could be anything
from buying a plane ticket to a pack of bubblegum. An official visit may
include the plane ticket, housing and meals, or it may include just
housing and meals or just meals depending on the college. Official
visits can last no longer than forty-eight hours and the University is
required to send you a letter acknowledging that you had an official
visit. The NCAA only allows each athlete to take five official visits.
Each athlete may take only one official visit per college but you are
welcome to take other unofficial visits to the same college.
If you are a National level diver, quite often the coaches will offer
you an official visit in order to persuade you to look at their college.
If you are not a National level diver, you may want to ask for an
official visit if it has not been offered to you. The coach may explain
that they cannot because they are spending money in other ways or have
no money left. If you are serious about a college and you are not
offered an official visit, you can arrange your own trip by calling
someone at the school and asking to spend the night. While you are
there, you should attend a few classes and call the coach to arrange a
meeting with him or her and members of the team.
Can my high school or age group coach help me get into college?
It depends on whom your coach knows and the team or club you
dive with. If you are from a small high school or your team doesn't
compete much, your coach may not have a lot of contacts and your club
may not be widely recognized. If you are from a nationally recognized
U.S. Diving club, coaches may pay a little bit more attention to you.
Age group coaches can help by talking to interested college coaches
about you. Most of the diving coaches know each other and are willing to
help.
Does training in the summer help?
Absolutely. Many college coaches use the U.S. Diving
competitions (Regionals, Zones and Nationals) to gauge your diving
ability. College coaches make a distinction between divers who compete
at regionals and do not advance to the zones, versus divers who make it
to the zones. Any diver who qualifies for USD Junior Nationals is
considered a strong recruit. Most college coaches are familiar with
these distinctions.
Should I ask my coach to write a recommendation?
Generally, coaches are happy to write recommendations for their
divers. However most college coaches know this and rarely does someone
give a bad recommendation. Usually, a coach who is serious about
recruiting you will call your club or high school coach to learn more
about you. They may also ask other coaches in your region that may have
seen you compete. The diving community is small, so most coaches will be
pretty straightforward with other coaches about your diving ability.
Will diving help me get into college?
The short answer is yes, although it varies from school to
school, coach to coach, and year to year. And there are lots of factors.
Obviously, if you apply to a college without a swimming or diving team
your diving may not be very useful. If you apply to a college that has
three graduating senior divers and you're better than they are, your
diving will definitely help you. Also it depends on how much the college
administration supports the diving team. With a supportive
administration, most coaches can help pull someone in if they are close
to the standards set by the college. There are 380 NCAA Division I, II
and III diving programs for men and 479 for women.
How much should the diving weigh in my decision-making?
There are some divers out there who have a goal of going to the
Olympics. In that case, college may not be the best choice because
training time is limited. Some may choose to go to college and train for
the Olympics simultaneously. In this situation it is clear that
selecting the right coach and program is more important than academics.
However, for the majority of divers who are not training for the
Olympics, it is important to keep in mind that after graduation the
thing that matters most is not your diving, but where you went to
college and what you learned there. I recommend that divers choose the
most suitable school from an academic perspective because that is what
really matters. The question that every diver should ask themselves when
looking at schools is: if I broke my leg and could not dive anymore,
would I still want to be at this school?
If the divers are good, is the coach good?
There are different types of coaches that you should be aware of
to help you determine if a school and diving program will be a good fit.
There is the good recruiter. The good recruiter can get a reputation as
a good coach because he has been successful at recruiting good divers,
but be careful, he may not be a good coach. You should try to determine
if divers in his program have improved during their college careers.
Then there are coaches that make and create their own divers. These are
coaches who have a history of taking divers that do not necessarily have
the highest level of talent coming into the University but are able to
improve tremendously while they are at the University. This is the type
of coach that usually works you hard. Of course, there are coaches who
are both good recruiters and excellent coaches. If you are serious about
a program, you should look carefully at the performance of that coach's
divers over their college career.
Some Dos and Don'ts
- After you and the coach have made initial conduct, make a video
tape and send it to the coach. You don't need to send it with you
initial letter unless that school is one of your top choices. Don't
over-edit the video. A coach will get a little suspicious if the
video shows eleven dives from eleven different meets. They would
prefer to see the real you - your talent level and what you are
capable of doing in a typical meet situation. This usually comes
through whether the tape shows your best dives or not.
- Don't show up to Michigan for a visit wearing an Indiana Diving
t-shirt!
- Don't dive for the diving coach, whether it is an official or
unofficial visit. Most divers on a recruiting trip feel the need to
dive for the coach; the NCAA strictly prohibits this.
- Don't feel you need to prove yourself at a team party by keeping
up with the others. If you're uncomfortable in a situation, just
walk away.
- Be honest with the college coaches about your interest level;
don't tell seven different coaches that their college is your very
first choice. If you do, you will have disappointed six coaches, and
that does not reflect well on you, your high school or club team.
And, keep in mind, you'll probably see these coaches on a judging
panel sometime in your college career.
- Don't be afraid to ask the coach where you stand in the
recruiting class; what your chances are of getting into the college;
and, the possibility for a scholarship.
- Don't judge your chances based on past years. Every year is
different based on the different needs of the team and the
university, and the availability of scholarship money.
After you have decided
After making a decision, put in a call to the coaches of the
schools you didn't choose who spent a lot of time with you and tell them
your decision. It is often very hard to call a coach who has shown a
real interest in you, but it is important that they hear about your
decision from you and not on the deck from another coach. You may want
to tell them the deciding factors that helped you make your decision,
but not too much detail is needed.
Questions to ask diving coaches (in no particular order):
- When are practices?
- Do you have double sessions?
- Do you do dry-land training or conditioning?
- How many divers are on the team; what years are they?
- How many divers on your team are walk-ons?
- Have your divers ever made it to Conference Championships, NCAA
Zones or Nationals?
- Do you train during school vacations?
- Do most of your divers compete all four years?
- Do most of your divers graduate from here?
- What is the relationship like between the divers and the
swimmers?
- Do you drive, fly, or take buses to meets?
- How long have you been with the University?
- Do you have an age-group program?
- Are college divers able to train off-season?
- Where do I stand on the recruiting list?
- How much assistance can you offer to help me gain admission to
the college?
- Do you have any scholarships available?
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