6th grade basketball “stars”
March 12, 2009 at 10:18 pm | In College Prospect Video | Leave a CommentSince many of you who read this blog dedicated to my digital media business are youth sports parents, I’m sharing a link to an article in the New York Times this week from Adam Himmelsbach that outlines the increasing emphasis being placed on younger kids… 6th graders especially… as college prospects.
It’s getting out of hand.
So much can change from the time when a 6th grade basketball player – boy or girl – is burdened with the label of the “best in their class.”
In fact, the article (“First Impressions Can Create Unrealistic Expectations for Recruits”) points out a boy nicknamed “Big Jon” as a 6′2″ 7th grader is now a 6′2″ 16-year-old in high school.
If you read deeper into the story you learn that 6th grader Perry Dozier Jr. in Columbia, South Carolina – no doubt a talented 12-year-old compared to his peers – has his own website featuring some of his highlight videos from when he was just five or six years old.
Of course, being a “video guy” I checked the clips of kindergarten-era “PJ” out. He was obviously very good from the get-go. Continue reading 6th grade basketball “stars”…
How young is too young for the NCAA?
January 19, 2009 at 11:16 am | In College Prospect Video, Team Video | Leave a CommentTags: 7th grade basketball, NCAA

Quick, name the best 7th grade basketball player, boy or girl, in your town.
If you replied to me out loud or in your head, “Why?” then we’re on the same page.
Why does it matter? It’s 7th grade for crying out loud. Well, apparently it matters to the NCAA. As a post last week from FOX Sports titled “NCAA classifies 7th graders as prospects” indicates.
I get that they are doing it for a reason. They needed to change the definition of a prospect from 9th grade to 7th grade – for men’s basketball only – to try and control how some Div. I college coaches are working with 7th and 8th grade boys at private, elite camps and clinics. The NCAA says it can’t regulate those camps because those boys fell below the 9th grade cutoff. The good thing is that it will limit how often coaches can contact those boys.
Administrative concerns aside, and the fact that “prospect” status really only applies to a select few 7th and 8th grade boys for now, I think it was already pushing it to think some 9th graders deserved to get attention from major college coaches.
Think about all that can change from 9th grade (not to mention 7th or 8th) to a prospect’s junior year in high school:
- Their talent drops off, or they stop putting in the practice time
- The talent – and height – of their teammates and opponents pass them up
- Their family situation changes (divorce, finances), making a hometown college choice more (or less) of a possibility
- They lose focus in school and their grades make them ineligible
- They end up excelling at another sport
That list just scratches the surface.
It seems to me to be a waste of time for a major college basketball coach to invest more than passing interest at a list of “elite” 7th and 8th graders. Wouldn’t you rather focus on the sophomores, juniors and seniors who are more likely to make a difference?
What I’d hate to see in all this is that the parents of 7th and 8th grade boys start asking people like me to shoot video of their son’s games, solely for the purpose of sending the video off to college coaches – at any level – as one of my “College Prospect” videos.
If they do, my answer is… no thanks.
When I shoot video at middle school – and younger – basketball, baseball, hockey, soccer, etc… games, it’s to capture the highlights for the parents, and that player, to watch years from now when the memories have faded. Or, as footage for a team highlight video that I will produce that a team watches at their season-end party that tells their story, no matter how many games they won or lost.
Let’s celebrate the talent of 7th and 8th grade players, in any sport, but let’s not get caught up that somehow a kid who averages 30 points a game in 7th grade is any more likely to be a college prospect at any level than the kid on the end of the bench.
I’m sure you’ve got a story here too, but out of the starting five on my 6th grade travel basketball team just one of them was even on the varsity roster in my senior year at Blaine High School.
Let’s realize that the goals of youth and school sports are to encourage dedication to a cause, promote leadership and teamwork and the importance of giving your best effort no matter what your current talent level is. If they’re good enough to catch a college coach’s eye, that’s great. If not, they still learned the valuable lessons that youth and high school sports provide.
And, get it all on video. So your kids can watch it with their kids.
A high school QB who doesn’t need video
November 16, 2008 at 1:27 am | In College Prospect Video | 1 CommentTags: college prospect, joe montana, nate montana, nick montana, recruiting video
I’ve written before about the ideal candidates for the “College Prospect” recruiting videos I produce. But for those of you just finding this blog for Kevin Hunt Video, allow me to back track a bit.
The recruiting video I create, on DVD and for online, are for the talented athlete that for whatever reason is getting overlooked by either Division II or III schools. It’s the athlete who knows that he or she is capable of making a roster at a certain school, but the coach at that college just hasn’t called to ask for video.
My “College Prospect” package also is ideal for the talented athlete who is getting some looks from the Division II coaches, maybe even several Division I’s, but they want to target a few schools they’d really like to play for (This is what Tom Brady did to get to Michigan).
That said, there’s one high school quarterback in California right now who won’t need a video to get to the major college level.
As in the youngest son of Joe Montana, the NFL great.
Check him out on video here. (Along with two of his teammates, the sons of hockey legend Wayne Gretzky and actor Will Smith). Nick Montana is a junior for an undefeated team heading into the California state playoffs. While he’s no doubt going to get a lot of Division I offers, he didn’t even start playing football until a couple years ago.
Nick isn’t the only Montana playing QB by the way. His older brother, Nate – while not as touted as Nick in high school – is in the spotlight at a major college football program. He’s currently way back on the QB depth chart as a walk-on at Notre Dame. His dad’s alma mater, of course.
That’s pressure, huh?
It’s worth noting that Joe Montana started his career at Notre Dame in 8th string at QB. I love that Nate chose the Irish, where his two older sisters also attend, and the pressure that could potentially go with playing there. Here’s some video of Nate.
For what it’s worth, Joe Montana told Sports Illustrated he didn’t want to pressure either of his sons into football. That’s why they didn’t start playing until high school.
Joe’s own dad, like many of you reading this, was his son’s coach in several sports for several years. Joe Montana’s will to win was truly extraordinary. And thank goodness there is video to prove it. He was a true winner in many game situations from high school, to college (like this famous comeback), to the NFL (like this), that seemed unwinable.
I had a chance to interview Montana when he was in his first year with the Kansas City Chiefs in 1993, when I worked for WEAU-TV in Eau Claire, Wisconsin and the Chiefs held their training camp in River Falls, Wisconsin. I was just 22 years old and I was literally shaking when I got to ask him a question. I was in awe.
By the way, here’s some more background on Nick Montana, including more video – via ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” – on Nick’s transition to his new high school and how it has been dubbed “Celebrity High” because of Montana and the sons of Gretzky and Smith. There’s a funny quote from Nick’s coach toward the end of that article and video at that link, talking about why he lets Joe Montana come out of the bleachers, down to the sidelines, during games.
If you’re last name isn’t Montana, and you need help creating a video to send to college coaches, call me at 651-402-7086 or email me at kevin@kevinhuntvideo.com.
Jared Allen’s growth spurt
September 7, 2008 at 10:27 pm | In College Prospect Video | Leave a CommentTags: jared allen
For all you sports parents out there…
As the Vikings – and their new defensive end Jared Allen – get set to kickoff the NFL season in Green Bay, I thought I’d pass along a note all parents of up and coming athletes can appreciate, no matter how old they are right now!
In today’s Pioneer Press, Allen said he was just 5′11″ and 155 lbs. at the end of his sophomore year in high school. “At 5′11″, nobody cared about me,.” – Meaning no college scouts were knocking down his door.
But at the beginning of his junior year, Allen said he had grown to 6′3″. 205 lbs and the scouts started coming.
Today, he’s 6′6″, 270 lbs!
Go Vikes!
Who is the next Steve Nash or Tom Brady?
May 5, 2008 at 11:52 pm | In College Prospect Video | 1 CommentTags: College Prospect Video, high school recruiting, Kevin Hunt Video, recruiting video, steve nash, tom brady
Two big names in professional sports, right? Did you know that neither player was highly recruited out of high school by college coaches?
Hard to believe, but it proves the blue-chip recruiting services don’t always get it right do they?
Nash and Brady needed to promote themselves, so their dads and coaches turned to video to do it. They made highlight videos and sent them to colleges around the country.
Nash, a two-time NBA MVP, ended up at Santa Clara University. And Brady, a three-time Super Bowl champion in four appearances, ended up at Michigan. The course of their lives would have been much different if they hadn’t wound up playing for the college coaches who saw something special in their skills and potential… on video.
I call it a “College Prospect” DVD. And, it could be the difference in getting a college to pay at least some of your son or daughter’s tuition at the next level – be it Division 3, 2 or 1.
But it’s not for every high school athlete. College coaches already know who the best prospects are. Those kids clearly don’t need to market themselves.
Instead, a “College Prospect” DVD from Kevin Hunt Video can help an overlooked or underrated player get noticed.
For just $150, I produce a 5-minute DVD featuring highlights shot by high school coaching staffs, and make 10 copies for the athlete to mail out to the college coaches of their choice.
I just wrapped up “College Prospect” projects for two standout varsity basketball players, They’re both juniors in the 07-08 school year and both are currently playing on AAU teams where they’ve gotten exposure to several major college coaching staffs. But their “College Prospect” DVDs also will help them catch the eye of a coach who might otherwise look past their talent.
You never know. It’s worth a shot.
It worked for Steve Nash and Tom Brady.
But more importantly, it’s also worked for thousands of student-athletes whose names are not well-known, who got some or all of their tuition paid for… and are now holding college degrees thanks to their skills with a soccer ball, hockey stick, golf clubs and more.
You never know. It’s worth a shot.
Here’s a sample from Tom Brady’s video:
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