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This isn't a generic guide pulled from an NCAA FAQ page. This is recruiting advice from someone who went through the entire pipeline — junior golf, college recruitment, and professional golf. The stuff coaches won't tell you until it's too late.
Most families start the recruiting process too late and too narrow. Here's the year-by-year breakdown of what you should actually be doing — not what the brochures say.
Forget what you think matters. Here's what moves the needle when a coaching staff sits down to evaluate recruits.
Coaches want your 54-hole or 72-hole scoring average across a full season, not your career-best 66. A player who shoots 72-73-74 consistently is more valuable than someone who shoots 68-77-78. Consistency wins roster spots.
Coaches who use Golfstat know that up-and-down percentage and putts per GIR are the real differentiators. Ball-strikers are everywhere at the college level. Kids who get up and down 60% of the time are genuinely rare — that's the stat that moves the needle.
Can this kid handle 6 flights in 8 weeks, play 25 competitive rounds in a semester, maintain a 3.0+ GPA, and not complain? Coaches lose recruits to travel burnout every single year. If you've never traveled for golf before college, that's a red flag.
At AJGA events, coaches sometimes ask the volunteer walking scorer about a player's demeanor. How you treat scorers, playing partners, and rules officials is part of the evaluation. One Instagram story of you throwing a club or trashing a course costs you offers. This is real.
3.0 GPA and 1100 SAT is the practical floor for D1 mid-majors. Below that, coaches have to fight their admissions office to get you in — and they won't fight unless you're elite. Strong academics make you low-maintenance to recruit, which coaches love.
Coaches Google you. They check your Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. They ask other coaches about you. They notice which kids are respectful in the scorer's tent and which ones slam doors. Golf is a small world — your reputation travels faster than your tournament results.
Most families assume college golf scholarships work like football or basketball. They don't. Here are the real numbers nobody talks about — and the strategy that actually maximizes your financial aid.
Split across 8-12 roster players. Most guys get 25-50% scholarships. Full rides are unicorn-rare in men's college golf — reserved for All-Americans and top-50 junior players.
Better odds than men's, but still highly competitive. The top women's programs are stacked with international players who are used to full-scholarship offers.
Smaller pool, but many D2 programs produce excellent college golfers. Competition for scholarships is still real, but coaches have more flexibility in how they distribute money.
Solid scholarship availability. Many D2 women's programs are actively building their rosters and have money to give to the right recruit.
Zero athletic scholarships by rule. But academic merit aid + need-based financial aid can cover 80%+ of costs at many D3 schools. Don't dismiss D3 because of the scholarship number.
Five full equivalencies with significantly less competition for them compared to D1. This is one of the most underrated paths in college golf. Smaller schools, strong team culture, real playing time.
Combine athletic scholarship + academic merit aid + need-based financial aid. Many families leave 30-40% of available money on the table because they only think about the athletic portion. A 3.8 GPA kid at a D2 school can often piece together more total aid than a 3.2 GPA kid with a bigger athletic offer at a D1. Run the full financial aid calculation before you commit anywhere.
Coaches won't tell you why they stopped recruiting you. But these are the reasons. Every single one of these has cost a junior golfer an offer.
Coaches talk to each other constantly. If your dad is calling the coaching staff every two weeks demanding updates or questioning lineup decisions, you are done at that program. Coaches will move to the next kid rather than deal with a high-maintenance family.
If your Junior Golf Scoreboard shows a 73 average but your AJGA events show 78, coaches see through it instantly. They know which events have legitimate fields and which ones pad your numbers. Honesty in your stats builds trust. Inflating them destroys it.
Coaches want kids who genuinely want to be at THEIR school. If you treat the process like an auction, coaches disengage. Show real interest in their program, their conference, their coaching philosophy. That's what earns offers.
If you won't spend a single day on campus before committing, coaches read that as low interest or a kid who's treating them as a backup. An unofficial visit costs you a tank of gas and a day of your time. The return on that investment is enormous.
If you need an NCAA academic waiver to be eligible, coaches will move to the next recruit rather than fight their admissions office for you. The waiver process is slow, uncertain, and makes the coach's job harder. Don't put yourself in that position.
Rules vary by division. Always verify current regulations with the NCAA Eligibility Center — they update rules regularly.
Coaches get 200+ recruiting emails a week. They scan for the scoring average number in the first 5 seconds. If it's not there, they're already on the next email. Here's the format that gets opened and gets replies.
Subject: [Your Name] - 72.3 avg - FL - Class of 2027 - Interested in [School]
Coach [Last Name],
My name is [Name], a [grade] at [High School] in [City, State]. My 54-hole scoring average this season is [XX.X] across [X] competitive rounds, and I'm interested in [School Name]'s golf program.
Quick numbers:
- Scoring avg (last 20 rounds): [XX.X]
- Best 54-hole total: 209 at AJGA Junior All-Star
- Recent result: [T-3rd at Event Name, 71-69-73]
- GPA: 3.7 | SAT: 1280
Links:
- Junior Golf Scoreboard: [link]
- AJGA profile: [link]
- Upcoming schedule: [link or list]
I like that your team competes at [specific course or event] — I've followed your results at [conference championship / specific tournament] and think my game would fit well in your lineup.
I'd welcome the chance to visit campus and meet your coaching staff. My schedule is flexible on [weekends / specific dates].
[Your Name]
[Phone] | [Email]
Subject: [Your Name] - Update - [XX.X] avg - [Recent Result]
Coach [Last Name],
Following up — shot [68-71] at [Event Name] last weekend. My scoring average is now [XX.X] across [X] rounds this season.
Next up: [Upcoming tournament name and date].
Still very interested in [School Name]. Would love to set up a time to talk or visit campus.
[Your Name]
[Phone]
Never mass-email coaches with a generic template. Mention something specific about their program — a course they play, a recent team result, their coaching style. It takes 5 minutes per email and it's the difference between getting read and getting deleted.
Lead with your scoring average in the subject line. Coaches scan subjects before they open emails. If the number isn't there, they skip it.
Include a link to your Junior Golf Scoreboard or AJGA profile. Coaches will click the link before they finish reading your email. Make it easy for them to verify your results.
Keep follow-ups short. Three to four sentences max. Coaches respect players who communicate like adults — direct, no fluff, results first.