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150$Page content includes 3 content sections and 1 top slider- Functional website
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Standard Web Design
200$Pages are Home, About us and contact us- Functional website
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300$5 new responsive pages. With header and footer.- Functional website
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40$Prices start at $40
WELCOME
We know you're GA....
But are you GA Elite
Many families decide to delay the start of their athlete’s recruiting because they think that recruiting starts with contacting coaches. They often believe their athlete just isn’t ready to take that step. However, there’s so much more that parents need to do before they begin reaching out to coaches. We’ve outlined the research and groundwork that families need to establish at the beginning of the recruiting process to ensure they are set up for success.
Every year, it seems like there are more and more stories about middle school athletes receiving college scholarship offers. Some athletes have made the news by receiving offers when they are as young as 9 years old! Early recruiting is a controversial topic, but it’s important to understand why and how it works.
NCAA Rules Update: New rules passed by the NCAA in 2017, 2018 and most recently 2019 have made it illegal for college coaches to offer scholarships to recruits before August 1 or September 1 of their junior year. These new rules apply to all sports except football, W/M basketball and baseball.
While making verbal scholarship offers to recruits in 8th, 9th and 10th grade is illegal, you can expect college coaches to be recruiting and evaluating prospects. Here is how that process works.
Early recruiting refers to the trend of college coaches recruiting athletes before the NCAA rules allow them to initiate communication with those recruits. For most Division I and Division II sports, coaches can start proactively reaching out to recruits June 15 after sophomore year or September 1 of junior year. However, many coaches believe Division I and some top-tier DII schools will make scholarship offers to athletes as young as 7th and 8th grade.