For the athlete who wants to play in college
The early mornings. The film sessions. The travel weekends.
You've put in the work. Most athletes never get seen — not because they aren't good enough, but because no one showed them how. We'll show you the path. And it's free.
Where Do You Stand?
You have time. Use it. Build your school list, start attending ID camps, and get your highlight reel ready before most athletes have even thought about it.
Start Phase 1 →The contact window opens June 15 after your sophomore year. Coaches can't reach out yet — but you can reach out to them. Start building relationships before the window opens.
Start Reaching Out →This is the most critical recruiting year. Coaches are watching, offers are forming, and classes are filling. Follow up after every showcase. Know where you stand on every list.
Read Phase 3 →Offers are on the table. Do not mistake a big name for the right fit. Go where they want you most. The coach relationship matters more than the conference.
Read The Offer →The Reality
A lot of athletes are better than their college commitment. Not because coaches didn't want them, but because coaches never saw them.
The recruiting process has a learning curve no one tells you about. Families that figure it out — get offers. Families that wait to be discovered — don't.
We figured it out. We are a New York family that built this system from scratch when we didn't want to deal with a $5,000 recruiting service. My daughter got 7 offers. Four were full D1 scholarships. She reports to her team in July 2026.
We created D1ProjX to help other high school student-athletes get the same opportunities my daughter received. Since her commitment, the system has helped families across soccer, baseball, basketball, lacrosse, and more. Now we want to help you.
The system is here. It's free. And it works for athletes across every sport.
Get the Free Blueprint →
The sports are different. The process is the same.
Every D1 offer
has a story.
Create yours.
The System
We built this because every athlete deserves to know how this works — not just the ones whose families can pay to find out.