June 15 Is Coming, Sophomores…Are You Ready?
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Our goal is simple, to help athletes and families understand what college coaches are really evaluating, what conversations often sound like, and how to prepare before one of the biggest milestones in the recruiting journey arrives.
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Now…let's talk about June 15.
The Date Every Sophomore Needs To Understand
For the Class of 2028, June 15 is no longer some date quietly sitting on the calendar.
It is close.
For many athletes, it will be the first time a college coach can officially pick up the phone, send a text, or begin direct communication following sophomore year.
For some families, that day feels exciting.
For others, it feels overwhelming.
Usually, it is both.
Athletes spend years preparing physically for moments like this. They train. They travel. They compete. They post highlights. They attend camps. They build résumés.
But what many athletes do not prepare for is what happens after the phone actually rings.
And that conversation matters.
More than most realize.
Coaches Are Not Calling To Ask If You Can Play
By the time a college coach reaches out, they have likely already done their homework.
They have watched film.
They have spoken with club coaches.
They have evaluated tournament performances.
They have looked at academics.
They may already know your physical tools, your position projection, and how you compete when matches get uncomfortable.
So when that first phone call comes, coaches are no longer asking:
"Can this athlete play?"
They are asking something much bigger.
"Can this athlete fit here?"
That is where recruiting starts becoming real.
Coaches are listening for confidence. They are listening for maturity. They are listening for communication. They are listening for whether this athlete can represent their program, handle adversity, and contribute to locker room culture.
That first call is not just about volleyball.
It is about trust.
The Biggest Mistake Athletes Make
One of the biggest mistakes athletes make is assuming their volleyball résumé will carry the conversation.
It will not.
Talent may get you on the call.
Preparation keeps you on the board.
When coaches call, some of the first questions often sound simple.
"Tell me about yourself."
"Why are you interested in our program?"
"What are your academic goals?"
"How would your coaches describe you?"
"What questions do you have for us?"
Simple questions.
Not always easy answers.
Especially when nerves show up.
Be Ready To Talk About More Than Volleyball
A lot of athletes know how to talk about their position.
Far fewer know how to talk about themselves.
And that matters.
Because coaches are not looking for a rehearsed speech.
They are looking for the athlete behind the jersey.
Before June 15 arrives, spend time thinking about what drives you when no one is watching. Think about what your teammates trust you for. Think about what your coaches consistently challenge you on. Think about what kind of college environment helps you thrive academically, socially, and competitively.
The best answers do not sound scripted.
They sound real.
And real athletes are easier to remember.
Your Recruiting Conversation Started Before The Phone Call
Here is something many athletes forget.
By the time a college coach calls, your evaluation may have already started long before June 15.
Your film.
Your emails.
Your communication.
Your body language.
Even your social media.
College coaches are paying attention to how you represent yourself when no one is asking you to.
Are you building a profile that says you are serious?
Are you communicating professionally?
Are you creating a digital footprint that matches the athlete you say you are?
Because in today's recruiting world, your online presence is not separate from your recruiting process.
It is part of it.
Do Your Homework Before The Phone Rings
Recruiting is not just about a coach liking you.
It is about finding the right fit.
That means athletes need to do their homework, too.
Before speaking with any college program, study the coaching staff. Study the roster at your position. Study the academics. Study the conference. Study the playing style. Study how athletes at your position are developing inside that program.
When athletes show up prepared, coaches notice.
And when athletes ask thoughtful questions, conversations change.
Instead of simply being recruited…
They start evaluating.
Questions like:
• What makes your culture different?
• What do you value most at my position?
• How would your players describe your coaching style?
• What does development look like in your gym?
Those are the kinds of questions that signal maturity.
And college coaches notice maturity fast.
Do Not Fall In Love With The Love
One of the biggest mistakes families make during June 15 is falling in love with who is calling instead of slowing down long enough to ask whether that program actually fits.
A phone call feels exciting.
An offer feels validating.
Interest from a big-name program can feel like the finish line.
It is not.
The right school is not always the biggest, the loudest conference, or the first coach to call.
The right fit is where your position is valued. Where your personality fits the culture. Where your academics matter. Where your development has a real plan. Where you can see yourself growing, competing, and becoming the best version of yourself over the next four years.
Recruiting is not about chasing attention.
It is about finding alignment.
And that is a very different mindset.
Sometimes…You Need To Make The First Call
June 15 signals the first day college coaches can officially begin direct communication with you, but that does not mean your phone is going to ring the moment June 15 arrives.
And that is okay.
Some athletes will hear from programs right away. Others may hear a few days later. Some may hear a couple of weeks later as coaching staffs work through recruiting boards, camps, travel schedules, roster needs, admissions conversations, and internal evaluations. The timing of that first call does not automatically tell you where you stand.
Be patient.
I usually tell athletes and families to give it about three weeks. Keep checking your phone. Keep checking your email. Keep checking your direct messages. Stay engaged. Stay ready.
But if time goes by and you have not heard anything, do not sit back and wonder.
Pick up the phone.
Call your realistic Top 10 schools.
Introduce yourself. Share your graduation year, your position, and why their program is on your list. Then ask a simple, mature question:
"Coach, I wanted to introduce myself and see if your staff is actively recruiting my position in my class, and if I might be on your radar."
That one phone call can tell you a lot.
More importantly, it tells college coaches something about you.
It tells them you are confident. It tells them you are prepared. It tells them you are willing to take ownership of your recruiting process.
And college coaches notice athletes who are willing to create momentum, not just wait for it.
Get Organized…Because Recruiting Gets Real Fast
Once June 15 arrives, things can get busy fast.
Texts start coming in.
Emails pile up.
Camp invitations appear.
Questionnaires show up.
Voicemails.
Social media messages.
Follow-up conversations.
And for athletes balancing the ending of club volleyball, summer travel, camps, training, schoolwork, friendships, and simply being a teenager…
It can become overwhelming quickly.
That is why I strongly encourage athletes to get organized early.
Create a simple June 15th spreadsheet.
Nothing fancy.
Just clear.
Track every school you have reached out to. Track every coach who reaches out to you. Track who is texting. Who is emailing. Who is watching your film. Who is inviting you to camp. Who is consistently following up. Who is showing real interest.
And just as importantly…
Track who is not.
Because one of the biggest lessons athletes learn after June 15 is this:
Your original dream list may not be your real recruiting list.
And that is okay.
Recruiting has a way of helping athletes realign expectations with reality.
Sometimes the programs you thought would call…do not.
Sometimes the schools you had not fully considered…show up consistently.
Pay attention to patterns.
Pay attention to effort.
Pay attention to who keeps showing up.
Interest tells a story.
Consistency tells an even bigger one.
The athletes who stay organized make better decisions.
Because recruiting is emotional…
But the best decisions are often made with clear information.
Parents…Let Them Own This Moment
Parents, I know June 15 can feel exciting, emotional, and sometimes stressful.
You have driven the miles.
Paid the club dues.
Booked the flights.
Packed the snacks.
Sat through the tough losses.
Celebrated the big wins.
You have earned the right to feel proud.
But when that phone rings…
Let them answer.
Let them talk.
Let them stumble.
Let them recover.
Let them own it.
When that phone rings, college coaches are evaluating and recruiting the athlete first, not the parent.
And confidence is not built by being rescued.
It is built by being trusted.
Sometimes the greatest thing a parent can do during recruiting…
Is simply stay quiet and let their athlete lead.
Final Thought
Sophomores…June 15 is coming.
Your future may be one phone call away.
So practice now. Research now. Communicate now. Prepare now.
Because when opportunity finally calls…
The athletes who are ready sound different.
And college coaches notice.
If This Article Helped Your Family, Help Us Keep the Momentum Going
🔥 Athletes
June 15 is not the finish line.
It is simply the beginning of a new level of responsibility.
Keep learning. Keep asking questions. Keep building relationships. Keep showing coaches who you are, not just through your highlights, but through your communication, your preparation, your consistency, and your willingness to take ownership of your journey.
The athletes who stay on recruiting boards are rarely the ones who wait.
They are the ones who stay engaged.
📣 Club Coaches & Directors
Thank you for developing athletes who are learning how to compete, communicate, lead, and represent themselves long before recruiting officially begins.
If this article brings value to your families, share it with your teams, tag @PrepDigCA, and help more athletes enter June 15 feeling prepared instead of overwhelmed.
🎯 College Coaches
The Class of 2028 is entering one of the most important phases of the recruiting process.
Thank you for the time, honesty, and investment you pour into evaluating not just talent, but character, coachability, communication, and long-term fit.
We appreciate the opportunity to help educate families on what truly matters.
🙏 Parents & Supporters
Thank you for the miles, the hotel stays, the early mornings, the hard conversations, and the belief you pour into this journey.
June 15 can feel emotional.
Exciting.
Stressful.
Sometimes all at once.
Trust the preparation. Trust the process. And when that phone rings…
Trust your athlete to lead.
🚀 Subscribe to PrepDig
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Your subscription helps us continue creating free recruiting education, meaningful evaluations, athlete spotlights, showcase opportunities, and coach-facing content that helps athletes get seen the right way.
The journey is just getting started.
If you are serious about being seen and evaluated on one of the biggest stages in club volleyball, the USAV Girls Junior National Championship Showcases offer a powerful opportunity to do exactly that. These sessions go beyond match play and give college coaches a closer look at how you communicate, process feedback, make adjustments, and compete rep after rep. Whether you are heading to Columbus or Indianapolis , this is your chance to step into an environment built for visibility, growth, and real evaluation. If you are ready for that kind of opportunity, registration is open.
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~ Michelle Bamford @Coachable247


