Recruiting Tips for July Live Periods
The final stretch of the travel ball season is here. College coaches from every level will be spread across the country over the next two live periods evaluating players before turning their attention back to campus. For many players and families, this can be one of the most exciting times of the year. It can also be one of the most stressful if expectations don't match today's recruiting landscape.
The NCAA Division I live periods run July 10-13 and July 24-27. During these windows, Division I coaches are allowed to be courtside evaluating prospects.
If your team is playing on additional dates throughout July, that's completely okay. There are still other days throughout July where college coaches from Division II, Division III, NAIA, and junior colleges may be in attendance. Statistically, that's where the overwhelming majority of players will continue their basketball careers, so every opportunity to compete still matters. The Division I live periods simply allow Division I coaches to be courtside evaluating prospects.
Coaches Go Where the Players Are
One of the biggest misconceptions every July is that college coaches attend an event simply because of the tournament, brand, or travel ball program. That's not fully how recruiting works. Coaches go where the players they are recruiting or players they need to evaluate are playing. They have a strategy and a plan in place based on their recruiting board set by their head coach and recruiting coordinator.
Yes, some of these travel ball programs consistently attract elite talent. Those organizations often have the resources, history, and national reputation to recruit many of the top prospects in their state or the country. Naturally, D1 college coaches will be there because that's where those players are competing.
That doesn't mean wearing a certain jersey automatically gets you recruited. If you're a player who can help a college program, coaches will find you. Focus on becoming the best player you can be instead of worrying about what logo is on your uniform.
2027s: It's Time to Evaluate Your Recruitment
For rising seniors, the recruiting process is entering a critical stage.
If you're consistently communicating with college staffs, have offers, or coaches are actively recruiting you, continue building those relationships and finding the best fit. If you are still hoping for your first Division I offer but aren't regularly hearing from Division I coaches, it may be time to honestly evaluate where your recruitment stands instead of waiting or holding out hope for those offers. That doesn't mean giving up on your goals. It means expanding your options. Don't overlook Division II, Division III, NAIA, or junior college opportunities simply because they aren't Division I. Those spots are limited as well and these coaching staffs have offers out to other players who could take your roster spot or scholarship as no coached want to play the waiting game either. Plenty of players develop at those levels before transferring to Division I after a season or two. Others stay and have incredible college careers while earning degrees, competing for championships, and maintaining a better life balance.
Go where you're wanted! Coaches who truly believe in you will invest in your development and give you an opportunity to succeed in basketball and life.
2029 & 2030: Trust the Process
If you're in the 2029 or 2030 classes, don't spend your summer worrying about scholarship offers. Yes, some players nationally already have offers. Those players are the exception, not the rule. The overwhelming majority of players in your class have little to no college recruiting activity yet. Most Division I coaches and other levels are focused almost entirely on the older classes.
Look at today's 2027 prospects. Two or three years ago, very few of them had multiple Division I offers. Recruiting evolves and changes regularly, and coaches are evaluating/offering prospects later than ever before.
Your job isn't to chase offers. Your job is to continue improving your skill set, becoming more consistent, competing every possession, and developing physically and mentally. The players who continue getting better year after year are the ones who eventually put themselves in position to be recruited.
Play With a Short Memory
Every player will make mistakes during a game. You'll miss shots, turn the ball over, get beat defensively, or throw a bad pass. College coaches know that, but what they pay attention to is how you respond. Do you hang your head? Complain to officials? Let one mistake turn into multiple? Or do you sprint back on defense, make the next hustle play, and move on? Basketball is a fast-paced game, and the best players develop a next-play mentality. One mistake doesn't define your performance unless you allow it to.
This becomes even more important at the college level. As an 18 or 19-year-old freshman, you'll be competing against players who may be 21 or 22 years old. The game is faster, stronger, and more physical. You'll likely play fewer minutes than you did in high school which means every possession carries even more value. You're going to make mistakes as you adjust. College coaches know that, too. Show them now that you can respond the right way. Make up for mistakes with effort, communication, toughness, and winning plays. Those qualities often leave a stronger impression than a made basket or easy transition bucket.
Control What You Can Control
You can't control which coaches are sitting courtside. You can't control who is watching your game. You can't control rankings, social media, or recruiting rumors.
What you can control is your effort, body language, communication, coachability, and how hard you compete every possession.
The players who consistently stand out during July aren't always the ones scoring the most points. They're the ones defending, rebounding, communicating, making winning plays, and competing with energy from the opening tip until the final buzzer.
Whether you're playing during the Division I live periods or other dates this month, approach every game with the same mindset. Compete hard, be coachable, trust the process, and play with confidence. You never know who may be watching!