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Whether you’re passing, blocking, digging, assisting, or just bringing relentless energy from the sidelines, this guide was created for athletes like you.
The recruiting world often highlights the MVPs and stat-sheet stuffers. Colleges also recruit role players, those who lead quietly, contribute consistently, and do what their team needs most.
This free guide gives you the tools to stand out and get recruited process started, no matter what sport you play.
Athletes in basketball, soccer, volleyball, football, baseball, softball, lacrosse, track & field, cross country, tennis, hockey, wrestling, cheer, swimming, field hockey, and more. Defenders, passers, relays, utility players, blockers, reserves, bench leaders. Student-athletes who want to lead, even without the spotlight. Parents and coaches who want to support without burnout
Because colleges do not build teams with just stars, they build them with
contributors.
And many of the most successful college athletes were once role players who outworked the hype.
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✅ How to stand out as a role player in any sport
✅ Tips for gaining exposure—even if you’re not the starter
✅ Scripts & strategies to communicate with college coaches
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✅ A full action plan to move your recruiting process forward
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Subtitle: How One U.S. Naval Academy Tradition Reflects the Journey of Athletic Growth
Header Image Suggestion: A high-resolution image of midshipmen working together to climb a lard-covered monument during the Herndon Climb. Overlay text: “Climb Together. Rise Together.”
The U.S. Naval Academy’s Herndon Monument Climb is a rite of passage that marks the end of a freshman’s plebe year. A 21-foot obelisk, slicked with 200 pounds of lard, stands as the final obstacle. It must be conquered not alone, but as a team.
On May 14, 2025, the Class of 2028 faced this challenge under heavy rain. They worked through exhaustion, slips, and chaos until one of them reached the top and replaced a white plebe cap with an upperclassman’s cover. The entire class cheered—not because one person succeeded, but because they all did.
Every student-athlete has a version of this climb. It might not be greased stone, but it is pressure, expectations, self-doubt, and adversity. The same themes from the Herndon Climb apply directly to athletic development.
Athletes win games, earn scholarships, and build reputations through consistent support systems. Coaches, trainers, teammates, and families form the base of every successful athlete’s “climb.”
Reflect: Who helps you rise when you slip? Who can you lean on when you are fatigued?
The Herndon Climb was soaked in rain. Student-athletes deal with sprains, slumps, and setbacks. Waiting for ideal circumstances will only delay your progress.
Tactic: Compete through the conditions. Adapt your mindset, not just your game.
No one assigns a team leader mid-climb. Someone simply steps up. Athletic teams are no different. Leaders are not always captains, they are the ones who speak up, lift others, and model accountability.
Challenge: Lead without a title. Show others how it is done before you are asked to.
Replacing the cap at the top of Herndon is symbolic. It is about what the moment represents: transformation. For athletes, milestones may include your first varsity start, a highlight reel viewed by a recruiter, or getting back in the game after injury.
Mindset: Celebrate the climb, not just the podium.
Use team-building exercises to sharpen collaboration and trust
Normalize discomfort as part of every athlete’s growth journey
Encourage peer-led leadership roles in practice and travel
Document and celebrate key achievements, no matter the size
The Herndon Monument Climb reminds us that personal victories are built on collective effort. That greasy obstacle in Annapolis is not just a monument, it is a mirror for what every student-athlete faces. Keep climbing.
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