AthletesGoing2College For Parents

The Parents Portal

Information written specifically for parents — to help and support your athlete through the recruiting process.

You’re not a spectator in this process. You’re not the manager of it either. You’re the adult in the room — the one who sees the financial reality clearly, reads the room on a visit when she’s too excited to notice, and holds the long view when it gets hard.

That role, done well, is one of the most valuable contributions anyone makes in the recruiting process. Done poorly — or confused with a different role — it’s one of the most common reasons capable athletes end up at the wrong school or arrive at college without the independence college demands. Everything in this portal was written for the role you actually have: the informed, steady, clear-eyed parent role that gives your athlete the best chance of making a great decision for herself.

Added Because It Was Missing Everywhere

Mental Health & Wellbeing

The recruiting process is one of the most sustained periods of evaluation and emotional pressure a young person can experience — performing, communicating professionally, managing expectations, and carrying a consequential decision, all at once, over years. Most recruiting platforms don’t address it.

This section does. It covers what normal recruiting stress looks like versus the signs that something needs more attention — burnout, comparison culture, identity pressure — how to open conversations with your athlete about how she’s really doing, and specific resources (crisis support, professional referrals, athlete-specific wellbeing organizations) for the situations that go beyond what a parent conversation can address. For some families, it’s the most important section on this entire site.

Open Mental Health & Wellbeing →
How to Use This Portal

Where to start, by stage

Freshman or sophomoreStart with the Timeline and the Readiness Checklist — know where you are before any significant investment of time or money. Read What Your Athlete Is NOT Telling You early; the sooner you understand the emotional landscape, the better equipped you are throughout.
Junior in active recruitingThe financial pages are urgent — Scholarships & Financial Aid and NIL before any offer conversations. Questions Only Parents Should Ask in your hand before every visit; Red Flags in your head during every visit.
Senior approaching commitmentCampus Visits, How to Support Without Taking Over, and the Before You Sign Checklist are the priority. This is when parent influence — in both directions — is most consequential.
If something feels offMental Health & Wellbeing. Read it, share the relevant parts if that feels right, and use the resources there if what you’re seeing goes beyond what the process normally produces.
If you’re not sure where to startRead What Your Athlete Is NOT Telling You — the most honest page in the portal, and the one that will tell you the most about your athlete’s experience of this process.
A Word Before You Begin

The most important variable is you

The process will test your patience, your objectivity, and your ability to hold hope and realism in the same hand. Through all of it, the most important variable in your athlete’s recruiting experience isn’t the showcase she attends, the email she sends, or the profile she builds — it’s whether she feels seen and supported by you, not for her performance or the outcome, but for who she is navigating something genuinely hard. That’s not a soft observation; it’s the practical foundation of everything else. Athletes who carry the confidence of unconditional support make better decisions, communicate more authentically with coaches, and arrive on campus with a healthier foundation. You already know this — this portal is here to help you act on it.

Give your athlete a professional recruiting profile that puts her skills, stats,

and videos in one easy-to-share link — ready for coaches anytime, anywhere.