
Forge does not treat recruiting like a local college list. We help boys and girls build a national, division-specific plan across NCAA Division I, Division II and Division III β then match the athlete's skill, academics, position, film and family goals to the right level.
The goal is not to chase a logo. The goal is to find the right competitive, academic, financial and cultural fit. A good recruiting plan includes national options, realistic division targeting, rules awareness, strong film, and position-specific training that translates when a coach watches live or on video.
Doug Steele brings recruiting insight from both sides of the process.
The national lacrosse landscape is different for men's and women's players, and each division recruits with a different rhythm. Forge helps families understand where an athlete fits now, where they could fit after development, and which schools deserve real outreach.
*Roster limits apply to NCAA Division I schools participating in the House settlement model. Individual school policies, scholarship budgets and roster management may vary.
Recruiting rules change, and every family should verify current NCAA guidance and school compliance policies. This is the practical Forge overview families need before they start sending film and scheduling visits.
Forge recruiting is not βsend more emails.β It is train better, film smarter, target correctly and communicate with purpose.
The timeline is not the same for every athlete, gender or division. DI tends to move earlier and tighter; DII and DIII can remain active later. The best families prepare early without pretending every athlete is on the same path.
Families should use platforms for organization, but they should still understand the rules and verify information through official NCAA and school compliance sources.
Forge recruiting preparation helps serious boys and girls understand national division fit, train the skills college coaches evaluate, organize film, build a real school list and communicate with purpose.