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Published bySteven Fields Modified over 8 years ago
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RUNNING IN COLLEGE
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GOAL Starting place for appropriately choosing a school you might want to run at Know what to look for Understand different options
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THINGS TO CONSIDER Where do you want to live What do you want to study How do you mesh with the coach / team What is your commitment level and completion level
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WHERE DO YOU WANT TO LIVE Are there good places to run? (trails) What is weather like when you are at school? How cold can you handle? Do you fit with the lifestyle there? ex. Wyoming vs Chicago
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WHAT DO YOU WANT TO STUDY If a school doesn’t have what you want to study, don’t look at it. If there is a possibility of you changing your major, make sure the school you’re looking at has that other major. Running in college can be very time consuming, you may need to balance your school load with training
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HOW DO YOU MESH WITH COACH / TEAM Does the coach care more about running fast or the people on the team Do you like the people on the team? What type of people does the coach recruit? Does the coach’s training philosophy mesh with what you believe
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COMPETITIVE CHOICES Division 1 – Biggest schools Division 2 – Mid-size schools Division 3 – Smallest schools – no athletic scholarships NAIA – Size of D3 with scholarship money Club teams – Available at D1 & some D2 schools
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DIVISION III / NAIA Smallest schools More personal feel / some are prestigious Most don’t have athletic scholarships (a few NAIA’s do) Athletes aren’t always as dedicated You will immediately be on almost all DIII varsity squads You will get a lot of attention from the coach (if they only coach and don’t teach) Less demanding on your time (easier to do well in academics) You will not travel as far from school for meets You will be a big fish in a small pond Very good shot at being an All-American
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DIVISION II Many have scholarships Good chance of you getting some athletic money Solid chance of becoming an All-American Very strong at top, but not as much depth nationally Usually have small budgets for travelling Good DII programs will beat good DI programs Less feeling of entitlement (guys run cause they love running) More room for walk-ons / less team restrictions than DI You will be able to help most DII teams as freshmen, but you won’t be the best
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DIVISION I Bigger school = more academic programs 12.6 male Scholarships, 18 female scholarships – For TRACK You will most likely have to walk on to a decent team Won’t make the travel team as a freshman and possibly a sophomore You will have to run hard year round (expect 60 – 100 miles a week during the summer) Everything will have to go right for you to make All-American Not as much coaching attention until you prove yourself Possibility of good travel budget (you could go a lot of cool places) Possibility of good equipment budget (free gear) You get to race against the best in the country Big school life – goods and bads If you are good enough, they will pay for a recruiting trip – you are allowed 5
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DIVISION 1 LARGE SCHOLARSHIP TIMES MenWomen 47.4154.55 1:51.472:10.21 4:08.64:50.0 8:57.310:28.8 Distances 400m 800m 1600m 3200m 10% ish scholarship – Can you score at conference (top 8) 20-40% – Top 3 at conference 40-70% - All American 80 – 100% - Top 10 in the Nation Times for 80%-100% scholarships
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RUNNING CLUBS At most bigger schools Great option if you want a big school, but still want to run Some schools like Oregon compete with other schools Worth doing your research
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TO DO LIST…. NCAA Clearinghouse – ncaaclearinghouse.net Some coaches won’t talk to you at all until this is done Make a list of potential schools Location / academics Appropriate Division Where do they rank nationally Convert times to sea level I have a PC converter I can share with you Look at team website & familiarize yourself Email coaches
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INCLUDE IN EMAIL Name, School, & Contact info Times – 400m, 800m, 1600m (or mile), 3200m, XC Converted Track times Explanation for why you haven’t run any distances ACT Scores and GPA
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….CONTINUED How long have you been running & where do you fit on FHS team What distances do you think you’ll do well in college What do you bring to the team other than running fast – all you understand hard work / dedication What does your training look like Summer – over distance 35-55 miles per week with lots of hills During season 25 – 40 miles per week with 2 to 3 workouts a week
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VISITS You get 5 official visits An official visit occurs when the University pays for anything, lunch, dinner, flight, hotel Make smart choices on your visit. You may be offered to do something you shouldn’t. (ex. Drinking) Listen to your GUT on trips, if something seems off about a team, it probably is.
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