When it comes to choosing a college baseball program, informed decisions are the best decisions. What questions should players and parents be asking during the recruiting process? Last week, we covered players. In this article, we outline topics, questions, and strategies for parents communicating with the college coaches who are recruiting their kid.
Our main advice? When you meet with college coaches, don’t spend your time selling them on your player– use it to ask insightful questions and gather all the intel you need to make an informed decision.
🔍 What Often Matters Most
Tuition & Financial Aid – Clarify total costs: scholarship/NLI details (length, amount, etc.), out‑of‑state fees, insurance, parking, meal plans, travel expenses, and aid contingency if your child gets injured.
Academic Fit & Support – Admission process, GPA/Test requirements, popular majors among athletes, tutoring and academic support personnel available to athletes, learning disability support/services, and transfer/graduation rates. Coaches and parents both want academically eligible, well-supported students.
Playing Time Expectations & Development – Ask where your child fits, competition at their position, freshman involvement, redshirting likelihood… know what “playing time” truly means at that program.
✅ Sample Questions for Your Agenda
Costs & Financial Aid
What’s the exact scholarship amount, and what does it cover? For how many years is the scholarship guaranteed? (Can also ask about NLI money, if that’s available)
What are current tuition, tuition increase projections, and out‑of‑state fees?
Are there mandatory fees, meal plans, parking permits, insurance?
What happens to financial aid if injury occurs?
Are there additional parental expectations (e.g., funding team travel, equipment, etc.)?
Academics & Eligibility
How do baseball recruits differ in admission process?
What’s team GPA, graduation rate, and typical timeframe?
How many players fall out of academic eligibility?
What does academic support look like and how is it implemented? (Tutoring, advising, course schedule selection, additional support and accommodations for students with learning disabilities, etc.)
Do many players transfer out?
Playing Time & Team Fit
Why do you think my son fits your program?
What challenges stand between my son and playing time?
How many others compete at his position?
What percentage of freshmen typically see game action or redshirt?
💡 Pro Tips
Review questions with your child before coaches’ visits—ensure you’re unified and genuine.
Start with questions, then share – lead the conversation with curiosity, then add personal insights if it makes sense.
Listen for tone: do coaches feel open or defensive to your questions? That reveals their communication style and can provide insight into how they are answering.
📊 Why These Questions Matter
No surprises: You’ll understand the full cost, academic expectations, and athletic plan.
Empowered decisions: With clarity in finances, academics, and roles, your family can evaluate offers objectively and compare different offers and opportunities.
Strong coach‑family relationships: Thoughtful questions demonstrate respect, interest, and maturity.
✅ Next Steps
Do your homework on the school before visiting.
Tailor your list for each school’s unique features.
Prioritize your most important questions so you don’t get sidetracked.
Be prepared to follow up—for example:
“Do you have a lot of freshmen who end up using a red-shirt year?”
“Do you see that as a path you might take for our son?”