Prepare for college as best as you can:
Get good grades, – Get as high an SAT score as you can,?- Take the tests more than once if you have to, – Make sure you register with the Clearing House, and?- Build a high school resume that shows you would be an asset to the school you wish to attend.
Investigate colleges in advance. You don’t want to go to a school just to play soccer, and the schools don’t want you there if you don’t fit. You should:
Find a school with major courses of study that interest you, – Be able to make the school’s GPA and SAT requirements or come pretty close to it, – Make sure you like the campus, city, and area for the school, and?- See if you like the soccer team, its coach, and style of play.
Narrow your search down to 10 schools by your junior year. Write those 10 schools and let the soccer coach know you are interested in their school. Send them a player profile. Our new on-line system will allow you to do this all electronically. Let the coach know you will be playing in the Surf Cup and give them your team’s other tournament schedule.
Update those coaches during your junior and senior years as your SAT scores come in, when your tournament schedules change, and when important items can be added to your high school and soccer resume.
As soon as you make up your mind about school, let all the coaches that have shown interest in you know, so they may put their attention elsewhere.
Teams
Make sure you have player profiles and are prepared to let college coaches have them.
Compile a list of the schools your players are interested in, and get your team schedule to the soccer coaches at those schools.
Be prepared to hand out player profiles to college coaches, but instead of carrying around a large booklet of profiles at tournaments, have a roster to hand out. Take the coaches’ business cards and mail them the full booklet later.
Leave your large boxes of profile books home when you come to Surf Cup as we give the coaches everything they want to have.
SurfCup.com recently chatted with Melina “Mimi” Lopez, former Surf Soccer Player and current Stanford University student about her trip to Tanzania in the summer of 2011. Mimi spent her time in the small village of Manyara where she started a girls soccer program to try and encourage good health through sport. What she discovered was how teaching girls soccer can be an empowering effort that resonates beyond the pitch. Surf Cup is proud to have assisted Mimi in her efforts there with a donation of soccer wear and soccer balls.
Gaby Beas was in eighth grade when her family began working on the tournament and she has watched the tournament grow and evolve over her 20+ years associated with the tournament.
We sat down with Gaby on Jan. 5, 2012 to discuss her family and their history with the Cup. Gaby spent many years running the “ice crew” at the tournament. Her extroverted personality was a great fit as she worked with all of the booth vendors and the first aid tent making sure everyone not only had their ice supplies, but also a smile on their face.