Interview by Mike Woitalla
Ambitions to play college soccer can have a significant impact on a child’s path through the youth game — and the dream of a college soccerscholarship is undoubtedly one reason why parents are willing to spend so much on club ball. We’ve asked Avi Stopper, the founder of college recruiting software company
SOCCER AMERICA:What are clubs doing to help players in their college choice and recruiting process?
AVI STOPPER: One of the benefits top youth clubs — whose membership feesare often pretty substantial — say they will bring when they’re trying to attract the best youth players is certainly a fair amount of college counseling. That comes in a few forms:
Guidance in how to deal with the process. Setting up “college nights,” where they bring in a panel of college coaches and the kids and parents ask questions. And the third is thenetwork that the clubs say they have within the college ranks.
For some clubs they’re very tightly networked with lots of college coaches. Others maybe not so much.
SA: It seems a lot of decisions at the youth club level are driven by the desire to expose players to college coaches. But there are myriad tournaments and an increasing number of leagues tochoose from. How should clubs decide which routes to take?
AVI STOPPER: There’s not really a formula, for better or worse. It’s more of aclub-by-club decision.
I want to stress there’s not something inherently better in one approach from another. If you say there’s a specific strategy and you go down that road,you could be closing off other opportunities and, for example, serving only players of a certain socio-economic class.
It’s a question of what the club wants to be and what itbelieves best serves the needs of the kids.
There are clubs that don’t take the long cross-country trips. The vast majority of high school graduates go to college within 400 milesfrom home. So some clubs stay in their area. They decide, “We’re going to go to tournaments people can drive to.”
SA: Very talented players, even at very youngages, leave teams that don’t win a lot of trophies for more successful teams — the notion being that they won’t have the college opportunities they’re hoping for if playing on aless successful team. …
AVI STOPPER: That’s certainly what the recruiting club will tell that kid. But that’s not necessarily the outcome.
It can happen that the superstar kid gets on a new team and isn’t getting as much playing time, which can start a vicious cycle. The confidence starts to fall when they play less,they don’t play as well, and so confidence falls even more.
I don’t think if you’re a good player you necessarily have to play for one of the big clubs. If you lovebeing on your current team, your best friends are on it, you can still play in college if that’s your goal.
There’s also actually an advantage to being a standout on a smallerclub, because there’s nothing a college coach likes better than finding a diamond in the rough on a “no name” team — because there’s so much less competition from othercollege coaches than for a player on an elite club. In many ways that’s a winning strategy for college coaches. If you’re a kind of mid-major college team and try to recruit a kidwho’s also getting recruited by the very top teams — that’s a daunting proposition
Players can market themselves to college coaches irrespective of what club team they playon.
SA: What can players do who don’t play for clubs that get a lot of exposure to scouting college coaches?
AVI STOPPER: It’strue that the most prominent clubs — on the boys side right now they’re the U.S. Soccer Development Academy teams — get lots and lots of looks from college coaches.
Ifyou’re not on one of those teams, for whatever reason — they’re expensive, they’re pretty exclusive, they may be geographically inconvenient — there are still ways to make acollege team.
Sending videos is one great way. Playing for a club that goes to other tournaments is still a great way. College coaches still go to those and there are lots of coaches whoare looking for diamonds in the rough.
You can go to a college camp during the summer. That gives you a lot of full exposure and the coaches might love you.
SA: Thenumber of high school-age players courted by Division I coaches with scholarships must be quite small. Can you offer some perspective on college opportunities for the majority of promising youthplayers?
AVI STOPPER: One biggest miscalculations or misconceptions is you have to be in that group with Division I scholarship prospects — or bust.
There are lots of great, rewarding college soccer environments for a very large spectrum of players.
Players who don’t get the attention the top group gets can fill out therosters of the better teams. There are a number of levels of college ball and players who don’t go to the top college teams can have really awesome, successful college careers.
SA: Is there something out there for the talented player who doesn’t have the grades for college soccer?
AVI STOPPER: There are lots ofopportunities. Divisions I and II have minimum GPA and SAT requirements and players must go through the NCAA clearinghouse. But there are many very good Division III and community college programs.
The community college environment in general is designed as a stepping stone — and it can be so for soccer players, too.
(Avi Stopper is the founder ofCaptainU.com, a college recruiting software company, and author of “Make the Team: The Art of Self-Recruiting.” He was the captain of the soccerteam at Wesleyan University and coached at the University of Chicago.)
(Mike Woitalla, the executive editor of Soccer America, coaches youth soccer for EastBay United in Oakland, Calif. His youth soccer articles are archived at YouthSoccerFun.com.)

Thanks for the article, it got my attention. For some exposure, here is a link to our son’s soccer highlights video(4min): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S44jvYF1frsHe will be a high school senior in Fall of 2011, has a 3.5 GPA (Honors/AP) and wants to play for a college in New England.He plays for Berkshire AJAX in the Capital District Youth Soccer League in the spring and for Mt. Anthony Union High School in the fall.We are starting the search for a school with strong liberal arts program and great soccer team. Any ideas?
Thanks for the article, it got my attention. For some exposure, here is a link to our son’s soccer highlights video(4min): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S44jvYF1frsHe will be a high school senior in Fall of 2011, has a 3.5 GPA (Honors/AP) and wants to play for a college in New England.He plays for Berkshire AJAX in the Capital District Youth Soccer League in the spring and for Mt. Anthony Union High School in the fall.We are starting the search for a school with strong liberal arts program and great soccer team. Any ideas?
Ah, yes, the dream of playing college ball– a big money-making machine. I’m thinking Eisenhower would have called it the college-industrial complex. And maybe Scarface was right after all: first you get the money; then you get the power; and then you get the….. full-ride scholarship to an NCAA D1 school? I guess you do get what you pay for. I haven’t run the stats, but I’m estimating that if you’re one of those children of a lesser god, without much money in the bank, your chances of getting seen, being recruited, and making it big are few-and-far-between. At least as far as college soccer is concerned.
Ah, yes, the dream of playing college ball– a big money-making machine. I’m thinking Eisenhower would have called it the college-industrial complex. And maybe Scarface was right after all: first you get the money; then you get the power; and then you get the….. full-ride scholarship to an NCAA D1 school? I guess you do get what you pay for. I haven’t run the stats, but I’m estimating that if you’re one of those children of a lesser god, without much money in the bank, your chances of getting seen, being recruited, and making it big are few-and-far-between. At least as far as college soccer is concerned.
Some Sobering Statistics on College Athletic Scholarships- From a 2008 New York Times Article, Boys Soccer- 330,000 High School Soccer players, 2,300 College Scholarships in Division 1 & 2, 6,000 H.S. athletes receiving full or partial soccer Scholarship (1.8%), $8,500 average annual value,Girls Soccer- 270,000 H.S. soccer players, 4,000 College Scholarships in Div. 1 & 2, 9,300 H.S. soccer players receiving full or partial Scholarship (3.4%), $8,400 average annual value,If you look at the numbers, I do not think most parents realize that only 2-4% of all high school soccer players get some sort of sports scholarship, and then when they do, it’s only, on average, a fraction of a full scholarship, and a fraction of what it costs to attend school. If your kid is not crazy fast, strong, quick, and/or athletic BEFORE we even talk about their technical soccer talent, the chances of even a partial athletic scholarship are very, very slim. I realize the percentage of players receiving scholarships are higher on these elite teams, but the money spent is really a bad investment if you are just in it for the potential scholarship. If the average scholarship is worth $35,000, most families will not see this return on their investment. Parents should invest their money in college savings plans rather than $1000’s on every bit of athletic training and travel teams known to man if they are primarily concerned about college. If they do it because their kids love it, then you are doing it for the right reason.
Some Sobering Statistics on College Athletic Scholarships- From a 2008 New York Times Article, Boys Soccer- 330,000 High School Soccer players, 2,300 College Scholarships in Division 1 & 2, 6,000 H.S. athletes receiving full or partial soccer Scholarship (1.8%), $8,500 average annual value,Girls Soccer- 270,000 H.S. soccer players, 4,000 College Scholarships in Div. 1 & 2, 9,300 H.S. soccer players receiving full or partial Scholarship (3.4%), $8,400 average annual value,If you look at the numbers, I do not think most parents realize that only 2-4% of all high school soccer players get some sort of sports scholarship, and then when they do, it’s only, on average, a fraction of a full scholarship, and a fraction of what it costs to attend school. If your kid is not crazy fast, strong, quick, and/or athletic BEFORE we even talk about their technical soccer talent, the chances of even a partial athletic scholarship are very, very slim. I realize the percentage of players receiving scholarships are higher on these elite teams, but the money spent is really a bad investment if you are just in it for the potential scholarship. If the average scholarship is worth $35,000, most families will not see this return on their investment. Parents should invest their money in college savings plans rather than $1000’s on every bit of athletic training and travel teams known to man if they are primarily concerned about college. If they do it because their kids love it, then you are doing it for the right reason.