It is No Longer Realistic to Expect to Kick or Punt in College Without Expert, Professional Help
Here’s why:
100% of NCAA Division I kicking-game specialists have received some form of private lessons.
Your college roster spot competition attends private lessons and camps. The colleges will select kids on whom they have the most information. That information comes from camps and camp performances.
Just attending a camp (or even one or two lessons) then attempting to learn through trial-and-error is the most common misstep in training for a high-stakes outcome. Speaking as experts: IT DOES NOT WORK.
If you have a goal of school and sport at the collegiate level:
· It’s not impossible
· With College-Prep Kicking, You’re in the right place
· You do not need to spend tens of thousands of dollars to do this
We are committed to continue guiding and training All-CIF, All-State, and All-American student-athletes just as we’ve done for over a decade and a half.
We formed as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit with two major objectives:
1. To inform and educate families toward a realistic, affordable path to a college degree.
Unsubsidized training can be unrealistic and unaffordable to all but a handful of families.
Many “kicking businesses” have formed in the past decade to charge 2 or 3 times as much as we do without a fraction of our experience, credentials, or exceptional record of success.
Ours is a financial investment equivalent the cost of one or two college classes.
Financial Aid Available. College-Prep Foundation funds training for recognition of the following:
You will not waste time and money soliciting colleges without a plan in place:
We know which colleges are looking for specialists
We likely already have a relationship with them
We can get them to watch your film of you meeting their athletic criteria. (this is important)
Here’s a typical scenario of a very talented student-athlete’s path to a College Roster Spot:
We had a local High School senior punter averaging over 44 yards a punt. 44 yards placed him #3 all time in San Diego County history. That alone attracted minimal DII and DIII attention during the season. San Diego State knew all about him, they knew his stats, they had his film. The punter heard nothing from SDSU. After the season the punter competed in the National Combine Series where he averaged 43 yards a punt. From there he knew that he was one of about 10-12 qualified punters in California who were all competing for the same 4 or 5 punting roster spots at places like Montana State, UC Davis, and San Jose State. Signing Day had come and gone and the punter still wasn’t getting much attention. Montana State passed on him-they said they really needed a punter but were passing on a DI punter hoping to find a “combo guy”. The only offer he got was from Azusa Pacific (DIII).
Meanwhile the punter adhered to the only formula that works: he kept coming to training sessions every single week to prepare himself to outperform his tough competition.
I called SDSU in late February and said I had a punter who averaged 44 yards during the season and 43 yards in a National Competition. This was The More-Information-The-Colleges-Have… I mentioned earlier. Only in late February did they look at his film, reassess his entire body of work, look at his transcripts and new ACT score again, and offer to bring him into fall camp.
Just like your academic transcripts, GPA, SAT, and ACT score guide the admissions office,
your athletic performance needs to follow a similar path.
You are building a portfolio.
Your portfolio needs to stand out among hundreds and hundreds of others.
You will commit yourself and dedicate yourself to be in a much better position for college acceptance.
Doing this will put you in an EXCEPTIONAL position for success in all current and future pursuits.