The Baseball Observer April 2015 vol 2 | Page 24

Let’s start with some basic numbers. From NCAA.org. Research    About five in 75, or about 6.8 percent, of high school senior boys interscholastic baseball players will go on to play men's baseball at a NCAA member institution. About nine in 100, or about 9.4 percent, of NCAA senior male baseball players will get drafted by a Major League Baseball (MLB) team. Approximately one in 200, or about 0.50 percent of high school senior boys playing interscholastic baseball will eventually be drafted by an MLB team. When you add in the NAIA, NJCAA, CCCAA and NWAC in comes out to be about 11.5% of all senior boys will play college baseball. If you make it to play college baseball congratulations, you are in a select group of athletes. So be sure that you make the most of it. First and foremost, education needs to be your first priority. Why? The odds are (see above) just about every college baseball player after graduation isn’t going to the pro’s so you’re going to have to get a job. Average Roster size (that includes redshirts)    The average roster size for NCAA DI is 35 The others average 30-32 There are several teams that carry 40 or more Athletic Scholarships (from the NCAA, NJCAA, NAIA, CCCAA and NWAC) College isn’t cheap and every year tuition continues to increase. Athletic scholarships aren’t available from all levels. To help from the financial side, below is the current athletic scholarship availability and breakdown for each level. Plus the majority of players, if offered an athletic scholarship, do not get full rides. Most scholarship money a school has to offer is split and divided among several players. All schools have some type of academic money or grants to offer but those depend upon your grades and other socioeconomic factors. NCAA Division I Schools: There are 301 schools playing Division I baseball. Scholarships: Baseball programs have only 11.7 scholarships so full rides are rare. Anything over 50% is considered really good. Most scholarships are split up and divided between up to 30 players. NCAA Division II Schools: There are 272 Division II schools playing baseball. Scholarships: NCAA allows nine scholarships per DII baseball program. Like DI, the scholarships go from full ride to partial. Partial scholarships are widespread in Division II.