Recruiting

SAMPLE EMAIL
TO COACHES

Your first email to a college coach is your first impression. Most recruits get it wrong. Here's how to get it right.

THE TEMPLATE

Subject: [Your Name] | [Position] | Class of [Year] | [High School]

Coach [Last Name],

My name is [Your Name]. I am a [class year] [position] at [High School] in [City, State]. I am [height] and I play [primary position].

I have been following [School Name] basketball and I am genuinely interested in your program. [One specific sentence about something real — a recent season, a player who developed there, the program's academic reputation in your intended major. Be specific.]

My current stats are [stats]. My GPA is [GPA] and my [SAT/ACT] score is [score]. I have attached my highlight film and a copy of my academic transcript for your review.

I would welcome the opportunity to learn more about your program and discuss whether there might be a mutual fit. I can be reached at [phone] or [email].

Thank you for your time and consideration.

[Your Name]
[High School]
[Grad Year] | [Position] | [Height/Weight]
[Phone] | [Email]

WHY IT WORKS

The subject line is searchable

Coaches receive hundreds of emails. A clear subject line with your name, position, class year, and school lets them file and find it. Generic subjects get ignored.

You lead with who you are, not what you want

State the facts first. Coaches need the basics — class, position, size, location — before they can decide if there's any fit at all.

The specific compliment is not optional

One real sentence about their program tells a coach you actually know who they are. 'I'm interested in your program' means nothing. 'I know three players from your last two classes went on to play professionally' means everything.

You give them what they need to evaluate you

Highlight film and academic info in the first email. Don't make them ask. Coaches who have to follow up for basic info usually don't.

Short and professional

Not a cover letter. Not a life story. Coaches read this in 30 seconds and decide whether to click on your film.

WHAT TO NEVER DO

Send a mass email with multiple schools in the To or CC field
Copy and paste the same email without personalizing the school-specific sentence
Include a YouTube link instead of a downloadable film file — some coaches' systems block YouTube
Wait to be discovered — send the email
Ask a parent to send the email on your behalf
Send it from a casual or unprofessional email address