Getting Organized To Swim In College

by SwimSwam Contributors 5

April 27th, 2017 College

When beginning any project, many people have trouble knowing where to begin and how to focus on getting organized, setting new goals, and being motivated. This can apply to your swimmer’s approach to being recruited to swim in college as well.

Becoming a college swimming recruit can be an intimidating process, especially if you and your swimmer are just getting started. It is never too late to start, though, and it is often helpful to break it down into manageable segments.

Here are some tasks to get the process off swimmingly –

Set Reasonable Goals for Swim Times in Best Events

If your swimmer is struggling to get a Senior Champs time in his best event, it is unlikely for him to expect to achieve a US Open cut and to be recruited at a top 10 swim program. Talking to a club coach can help your swimmer develop realistic goals for time improvements between now and the end of his junior year in high school when coaches begin getting serious about recruiting swimmers.

Most coaches try to recruit swimmers who will score points in the Conference Championship meets. After your swimmer sets some reasonable goals regarding times, he needs to see which conferences he fits in by looking up the times achieved in the previous year’s championships.

Be setting reasonable goals, you will have a better idea time-wise of which schools are viable.

Identify 20 Target Schools

Identify approximately 20 schools that would be of interest based on climate, geographic location and size. If your swimmer hates the heat and humidity, going to school in Florida or South Texas is probably not a good idea as he will only like the climate for about 4 months of each school year.

If your swimmer has an idea of his academic interests, it is helpful, but many students do not at this age. Fortunately, most colleges expect this and offer a wide variety of programs. Approximately 75% of students change their major at least once during college so do not be alarmed if your child does not have career goals in mind yet.

Your swimmer may have grown up rooting for the hometown team and always dreamed of swimming at the state flagship school but most of these schools are very fast and this may not be a realistic goal as your swimmer gets older. There is no need to be discouraged though as there is a school for (almost) everyone – it is a matter of finding the right fit.

Be Sure Social Media is Clean

Some coaches and college admissions officers truly do check the social media accounts of prospective students and athletes and once something is put on the internet, it can be found.

This is the time for your swimmer to check all of her social media accounts and make sure nothing offensive is posted. If a friend frequently posts offensive or off-color material, it is a good idea to unfollow the friend as it can show up on your child’s wall. I always told my kids “you are judged by the company you keep” and your child would hate to be eliminated as a potential recruit based on something that one of her “friends” posted.

Designate Time To Accomplish Reasonable Tasks

Instead of deciding to look at times required to score in Conference Championships for 30 conferences in a weekend or to complete 20 Recruit Questionnaires in one day, your swimmer should decide what is manageable along with homework and swim practice. My son used to take about an hour on Saturday afternoons to complete Recruit Questionnaires (found on most college athletics web sites) and to look up information about schools. He came home from swim practice to eat and sleep (of course!) then woke up and spent some time on recruiting tasks before going on to another activity.

As he got further into the recruiting process, he would use this time to email coaches to introduce himself and to correspond with the coaches he developed a rapport with.  

Executing these first few steps will begin the recruiting process in an organized manner, and help your child get off to the right start.

About College Swimming Guide

College Swimming Guide simplifies the process of being recruited to swim in college by providing sample emails to coaches, lists of questions to ask coaches, a community to interact with other parents, and spreadsheets of colleges and conference championship times to see where your swimmer fits. We also have lots of information available, such as checklists to find the right fit to swim in college, NCAA Rules Summary, NCAA Calendar and more. We will walk you through the process and let you know what to do and when to do it.    

To learn more and to receive the College Swimming Guide Relay, sign up here.

Michelle Lombana is committed to helping parents like her whose children want to swim in college by simplifying the recruiting process through www.collegeswimmingguide.com. Check out her summary of NCAA Recruiting Rules and NCAA Calendar for helpful dates.

Swim News is courtesy of Michelle Lombana, a SwimSwam partner. 

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BGNole97
6 years ago

SwimmingRank.com is a great website for use in a swimmer’s recruiting efforts.

The site not only shows how the swimmer’s times rank within Div I, II and III, but also within the various conferences and the different individual schools.

It also has a great graphing feature that shows the swimmer’s progression over time that sites such as USA swimming do not have.

Flat Stanley
6 years ago

Make an account on Collegeswimming.com , very important for coaches to be able to look at your time professions through the years. Also powerful tool to look at college’s times and info summaries

Swim
6 years ago

As much as this is a great article with lots of great advice, this advice is really best for the swimmer themselves and not the parents.

jimswim
Reply to  Swim
6 years ago

That’s exactly what i was going to say. I have a HS senior. Told him 2years ago to ask me if he needed help or advice. He got out all done himself including finding ways to make applications for free. I did have fun taking him on visits junior year.

Speed
6 years ago

Keep on open mind. You never know. My daughter fell in love with a school not on her list that she stopped by on a visit to another. Guess where she is going?