A college combine is a one-day, individual-based recruiting event for high school students athletes to demonstrate their skills, receive physical measurements (height, weight, speed, agility) and get filmed for college coaches. A college combine allows college coaches to evaluate talent efficiently for recruiting and scholarships.
Each sports has unique and sport-specific drills that a high school student athlete will do.
All high school student athletes are video-recorded and contact information is provided to college coaches.
Players receive a JERSEY with a unique number for identification purposes.
The athletic drills may include, but not limited to, a standing vertical jump, maximum vertical jump, bench press/push ups, sprint time, lane agility time, and modified event time. Each sport has unique drills.
Physical measurements include height, weight, wingspan, standing reach, body fat, hand length, and hand width.
A college combine is considered to be the #1 source a college coach uses when FIRST LOOKING & CONSIDERING a high school student-athlete.
For example, in high school baseball, a player will get on average 3 at bats and 4 fielding opportunities per game. At a college combine, a player gets 50+ at bats and 50+ fielding opportunities. A high school student-athlete baseball player may get more opportunities to swing and field at a college combine then his entire high school baseball season.
These same situations are for basketball and football college combines.
A college combine is NOT instructional – Players will NOT be instructed by coaches.
Additional Information
Information about College Scholarships
