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I'm 5'7, and I've been playing ball since the 4th grade, I'm a senior in highschool now. People tell me that I'm awesome, I think I'm pretty good, but my school is really small and it's not like any scouts come check us out.

2006-08-20 04:21:03 · 19 answers · asked by Edags 2 in Sports Basketball

19 answers

Never give up.

2006-08-20 05:25:01 · answer #1 · answered by suarzonthego 2 · 0 0

Forget about the WNBA for now. Worry about college-one thing at a time. Have your coach send out some letters to some colleges you would like to go to. Making a highlight tape would be good to send out too. You could always walk on at a university but consider going to junior college. You will get to play right away, get experience at a higher level, and you will get noticed a lot more than you did in high school. JUCOs are an awesome way for unnoticed players who have talent to continue imoproving and in two years tranfering to a Div 1 where they could not have gone too out of high school.

2006-08-20 08:37:50 · answer #2 · answered by stapes0 1 · 0 0

Talk to your coach. Go talk to some universitys that you are interested in. Do everything everyone else is telling you, but those people telling you 5'7 is to short to play, they are wrong!
Becky Hammond is a 5'6 point guard for the New York Liberty. She is an All-Star.
Jia Perkins is a 5'8 guard for the Chicago Sky.
Linsday Whalen is a 5'8 guard for the Connecticut Sun. She is an All-Star.
Those are just the top three I thought off of my head.
If you have game, you'll get somewhere. Good Luck!

2006-08-20 11:58:40 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you have all around skills, i.e. scoring, defense and are a solid free throw shooter, with your height, i'd aim for a Division II or NAIA school. It really depends if you want to be a small fish in a big pond and sit on the bench or actually play and contribute. There are some really great Division II and NAIA programs that like to recruit from smaller schools and they offer top notch educations on top of that. But if you aim for this you're grades better be top notch too. These schools are looking for true "Student Athletes"! I played for a small private H.S. and went on to play at a Divison II school and was by no means the best player ever, but I was a solid all around player with good defensive skills. I also received a free education from on the best colleges for my major. Can't beat that! Good Luck! and don't forget JuCo programs. They are a great lauching pad to 4 years programs.

2006-08-21 11:21:13 · answer #4 · answered by Kristi B 2 · 0 0

I think if u talk to your coach and see if they have any connections to colleges then do that also keep your GPA up and colleges will look at you for that... Keep practicing and working hard at it and if u get into a college and stay all 4 years i think u will have no problem making the WNBA.. Just never give up and dont let ne one put u down.

2006-08-20 06:07:17 · answer #5 · answered by Joshua 1 · 0 0

If no colleges have contacted you are your coach, then your best bet is to "walk on" to a college team.(walk on means try out in college terms) Contact the coach of the college that you're interested in and ask when do they allow walk ons to try out. And 5'7 is a good height for a PG even in the WNBA.

2006-08-20 16:11:37 · answer #6 · answered by Boss Lady 1 · 0 0

it doesnt matter how tall you are, but it does matter how good you are. What I would advise you to do is keep practicing, keep up your confidence and never give up.

But here's a list of accomplishments that the most WNBA players do have (just to name a few):

-an all city/state selection while playing high school bball
-active part of the 8-9 player rotation on the college team
-invitations to elite camps (i.e. ABCD, McDonalds All American)

2006-08-20 12:06:17 · answer #7 · answered by Lovely78 3 · 0 0

Why not, even if you are in a small school doesn't mean you can't. If you have good grades you can go to a have way go university. Where you may have to work your but off to make the team. but once your on it just keeping work and prove that you are that good. If you want it bad enough you can do it. It may be a lot of work but it will be worth it in the end.

2006-08-20 04:39:59 · answer #8 · answered by Michael R 1 · 0 0

Isn't 5-7 awfullly short for the WNBA?

2006-08-20 04:26:34 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i hope you are a point or shooting guard at 5 ft 7. if not- you wont play D-1 ball.
what are your stats.....
assists, turnovers, points per game, rebounds. if you are a guard you better be scoring about 20 a game plus a lot of assists. if not. you better try D-3 schools.

2006-08-20 08:52:06 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

positioned your elbow under the basketball, pass your arm into an arch, push in basic terms nicely adequate and aim. be sure the ball eases off of your fingertips clearly as you shoot (do no longer forget approximately to be dealing with the bucket in triple threat place with taking walks particularly in front of the different). training layups facilitates your concentration and velocity, besides as capturing as we communicate.

2016-09-29 11:40:42 · answer #11 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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