⚠️ Shifting Roster-Management Trends
College baseball rosters are older than ever. The transfer portal and JUCO transfers are booming. The number of roster spots at the D1 level have been cut down. Add all this up and you begin to understand why the path to college baseball for high school players is more difficult than ever. Getting college baseball opportunities at any level requires patience, performance, and a good plan. In this article, we explain why you need to keep an open mind and explore multiple avenues to get recruited (diverse recruiting plan).
Want to learn how to make a diverse recruiting plan in a podcast format? Click play below!
🎯Why a Diverse Recruiting Plan Matters
While all college coaches are looking to recruit high character kids with outstanding athletic ability and quality academics, each program has slightly different preferences and recruiting strategies. A KPB survey of college coaches, for example, revealed 8 different ways that the coaches connected with recruits who eventually ended up in their program.
Many families fall into the trap of targeting only one type of school (Hello, D1 or bust mentality!) or over-relying on one strategy for connecting with college coaches (showcases, mega-tournaments, etc.). The smartest athletes build multi-path strategies that are both realistic and ambitious. A diverse recruiting plan– one that accounts for the many ways college coaches find players and the subtle differences each program has in recruiting strategy– increases opportunities, reduces risk, and helps you stay focused on what you control.
🔧 What Defines a “Diverse Recruiting Plan”
A diverse recruiting plan is one that keeps an open mind to different college playing opportunities and provides a recruit with multiple avenues for getting discovered and recruited.
Build your plan to include:
Pursuit of Multiple Divisions (D1, D2, D3)
Consideration of NAIA or JUCO programs, especially if you want playing time or development track record
Academic-only routes or partial scholarships
Hybrid paths, like starting at JUCO then moving to a 4-year school
This broad mix prepares you for unexpected offers, program changes, and personal growth.
✅ How to Build a Multi-Path Recruiting Strategy
1. Start with your universal traits
Every coach values character, work ethic, coachability, academics, and baseball ability. These are constant across all programs and levels. Get really recruitable in each of these areas. Before you can get recruited, you need a recruitable skill set. Put in the work.
2. Map out steps to realistic outcomes:
There are distinct stages to the recruiting process (see above!). Our Recruiting 101 maps it out for you. Visit here to understand each stage and the steps to get through each successfully. It’s not a race. Everyone will go through the steps at a different time and pace. Below are some of the most important activities you’ll need to do.
Activity
Desired Outcome
Benefit
Research
Learn/understand college levels and different programs
Research is essential for saving time and money. Quality research allows you to stay ahead of the recruiting journey, understand realistic options, and save valuable time and money.
Communication with coaches (emails/DMs)
Share video, express interest, connect with coaches, garner interest from coaches in cost-effective way
Showcases and tournaments get the most hype, but a quality email/DM paired with quality video is all you need to get on a coach’s map. Get interested eyes on you before playing in front of them in person in the most cost effective way.
Exposure (Games, Showcases, Tournaments, etc)
Show off skills to new and known coaches
Allow athletes with recruitable skillset to get in front of coaches and show them what they can do. When done thoughtfully, players can get interest before going to the event, so they are in front of the right coaches.
3. Create fit-based lists for each path
Create a list of schools that interest you. Include dream schools, safety schools, and everything in between. Prioritize schools that match your skills, academic interests, and long-term goals, but keep an open mind to different options and paths. Putting all your recruiting eggs in one basket is not the best idea.
4. Be flexible and invest time and money wisely
As recruitment opportunities show up, be comfortable adapting your plans on the fly. Being informed and knowledgeable will help you stay out of the rat race and do what’s right for you. Invest your time on schools that make sense for you and spend your money on resources that will help you continue to get better. Continuous improvement is the most important thing for playing at the next level.
🧭 Critical Reminders
Don’t put all eggs in one basket: Injuries, coaching changes, or roster saturation can disrupt a single-path approach.
Leverage JUCO thoughtfully: JUCO is a proven pipeline to 4-year programs and not just a fallback option.
Invest in adaptability: Learn how to read the room and adjust tone across different communication styles with coaches, staff, and teammates
📌 Action Steps You Can Take Right Now
📝 Spend time understanding college baseball opportunities, the recruiting process, and developing a personal plan
📈 Put in the work to become a recruitable player on and off the field
✉️Contact coaches and programs with quality video to express interest and gauge their interest in you
🔄 Revisit and refine your plan every 2‑3 months as offers or feedback come in.
🎯 Why This Sets You Apart
By creating a diverse recruiting plan, you demonstrate maturity, thoughtfulness, and readiness for the realities of recruiting today. You’re not just hoping for one good option—you’re preparing for multiple successful routes to college baseball.