EXACT Exposure Camps give athletes personal interaction & exposure to college coaches from top NCAA programs.
A great showcase camp is more than just exposure.
There's exposure...and then there's real, personal connection. At EXACT, you meet with top coaches from the minute you arrive, making this the best place for aspiring college soccer players. The college coaches work with you to evaluate your ability as a player and get to know you as an individual.
Get a digital evaluation from a college coach at the conclusion of camp. This shareable evaluation highlights your strengths and tells you exactly what you need to improve to get recruited.
Build skills for leadership, focus, and handling adversity on and off the field. Based on training used by hundreds of pro and college teams.
Get the tools and insights you need to stand out during recruitment.
Learn:
Coaches run training sessions similar to the sessions you would attend in their program. Experience first-hand which coaches you most connect with and what it's like to be on a college team.
Over 1,000 NCAA D1, D2, D3 and NAIA coaches in EXACT's network have access to your gameplay footage from camp. Video packages, including highlight reels, are available for campers.
Volunteer Assistant Coach
rbutler@athletics.pitt.edu
Pittsburgh
Division 1
Riley Butler joined the University of Pittsburgh women's soccer staff in July 2018 after spending the previous four seasons as the assistant men's soccer coach at Radford University.
I would like to thank Randy Waldrum for the opportunity to join his coaching staff and work with one of the best coaches in the game, Butler said. I am excited to be welcomed by the Pitt family and I am looking forward to working with the student athletes and competing in the ACC.
Butler helped lead the Highlanders to an overall record of 50-17-11, leading squads that were ranked in the top 25 in 2014, 2015 and 2016. The Big South Tournament champions in 2016 and regular season champions in 2014, 2015 and 2016 earned NCAA berths in both 2015 and 2016 under Butlers tutelage.
Since July 2014, Butler has also served as the Director of Youth Development and Director of Academy of the New River United Soccer Association. In addition to his club coaching experience, Butler served as the assistant boys coach at Episcopal School of Jacksonville (2012-14) and Fletcher High School (2008-12).
Following his collegiate career (2005-09) at Jacksonville University, Butler played three seasons for Jacksonville United and helped the squad to a NPSL National Championship in 2010. A Division I Scholar-Athlete at Jacksonville, he played an integral part in the Dolphins 2007 regular season Atlantic Sun Championship, 2008 A-Sun conference tournament title and second round appearance in that seasons NCAA College Cup.
A 2009 graduate of Jacksonville University, Butler earned a bachelors degree in marketing and management.
Coach
ebasten@indiana.edu
Indiana
Division 1
Basten transferred to Indiana in 2015 for her senior season after playing three years at Central Michigan. In 2017, she joined the IUWS staff as the Graduate Assistant. In that role helped to coordinate travel, day-to-day operations, and all administrative activities.
A native of Hoffman Estates, Ill., Basten played every game of the 2015 season on the Hoosier backline and helped guide the Hoosiers to a scoreless streak of 463 minutes, the second-longest span in program history. In addition, she was named the 2015 Big Ten Sportsmanship honoree. At Central Michigan, Basten started 42 games and served as team captain during her junior season with the Chippewas.
Emily now joins the Indiana Women's Soccer staff as an Assistant Coach for the 2019 season.
Assistant Coach
isa.ar-razi@wright.edu
Wright State
Division 1
Isa Ar-Razi joined the WSU womens soccer program in the Fall of 2017. Ar-Razi, a former Raider, started for the WSU mens team from 1999 2002 and was named team captain as a senior. Before moving back to WSU, Ar-Razi served as an assistant at the University of Dayton Womens Soccer team for the 2016 Season. Ar-Razi currently is on staff with the Ohio Celtic Alliance and the Ohio Galaxies FC and holds his USSF A license and his NSCAA Advanced National Goal Keeping Diploma.
Assistant Coach
danball@bgsu.edu
Bowling Green
Division 1
Dan Ball enters his second year on the Bowling Green State University women's soccer staff, having helped the Falcons to one of the greatest seasons in program history in his initial year in Northwest Ohio. Ball, a native of Chatham, England, was hired in June of 2018 and, among other duties, works with the Falcons' goalkeepers.
"We are very excited to have Balley join our team," said BGSU head coach Matt Fannon at the time of Ball's hiring. "As a young goalkeeper coach he has already shown great success and growth in his abilities and will immediately challenge our 'keepers to improve. He is smart, ambitious and a winner, so will fit in well and help us all to grow. He is the perfect addition to our staff."
In Ball's first season with the program, BGSU won both the Mid-American Conference regular-season and tournament titles, tying the school record for overall wins and shattering the program mark for conference victories.
The 2018 Falcons went 14-5-3 overall and 10-1-0 in MAC regular-season play. BGSU captured the league regular-season crown for the second time in history, and won the league tournament title for the third time ever.
BGSU had a school-record five players named to the All-MAC First Team and the Ohio Collegiate Soccer Association All-Ohio First Team in 2018. That quintet included seniors Morgan Abbitt and Erica Hubert and juniors Kathleen Duwve, Maureen Kennedy and Chelsee Washington.
Those same five players all were named to the United Soccer Coaches All-Midwest Region Team. Hubert became the first player in BGSU history to be named to the all-region first team, while the other four Falcons were voted to the second team.
BG had those five all-region team members in 2018 after having a total of four in the first two-plus decades of the program.
In the classroom, still more records fell. BGSU had a school-record 12 student-athletes named to the Academic All-MAC Team in 2018, and four of those 12 student-athletes went on to be named MAC Distinguished Scholar-Athletes, tying for the highest total in the MAC. That group included Duwve, Kennedy, Washington and senior Elisa Baeron.
Three of those Falcons Duwve, Kennedy and Washington each were named to the USC Scholar All-Region Team, and Baeron was named an Academic All-American. Baeron was named to the 2018 Google Cloud Academic All-America Team, selected by the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).
Baeron, who earned third-team honors, became just the second CoSIDA Academic All-America selection in program history.
Kennedy and Washington had joined Baeron on the Academic All-District Team, before Baeron went on to earn national honors.
On the pitch, the Falcons rolled through the rest of the conference en route to the 2018 titles.
BGSU broke the school records for most home wins in a season and most consecutive victories at home. The Falcons went 10-1-2 at Cochrane Stadium in 2018, breaking the previous single-season record of eight home victories (8-1-1 in 2008).
The Falcons captured nine-straight matches at Cochrane, breaking the mark of seven set by that 2008 team. The winning streak was snapped in the MAC Tournament's championship match, but BGSU takes an 11-match home unbeaten streak (9-0-2) into the 2019 campaign.
BGSU started the 2018 season with a 1-3-2 record before ending the non-conference portion of the schedule with a dominant 6-0 win over Youngstown State. Then, the Brown and Orange steamrolled their way through the MAC schedule, going 10-1-0. The Falcons won the first eight league matches before falling, 1-0, at Akron. BG outshot the Zips, 25-7, in that match, hitting the crossbar with a pair of shots, but nevertheless saw an overall nine-match win streak come to an end.
The Falcons bounced back in a big way, posting a 5-0 win at Buffalo to clinch the conference regular-season title. Then, BGSU proceeded to end the 2018 season for four consecutive opponents.
The Orange and Brown topped arch-rival Toledo, 2-1, to end the regular season. That result knocked the Rockets out of the MAC Tournament race. BG then dispatched Eastern Michigan and Ohio in the league tourney, before tying Ball State, 1-1, in the MAC Tournament final. BG trailed the Cardinals during most of the penalty-kick phase, but rallied back to advance past BSU and capture the league tourney crown.
The Falcons scored two or more goals in a match on 12 occasions in 2018, including 10 times in the 14 matches vs. MAC foes. BG allowed as many as two goals only twice, in a 2-0 loss at then-No. 15 Northwestern and a 4-1 setback at Penn State in the NCAA Championships.
Following that Northwestern match on Sept. 9, BGSU never trailed at any point in any game until Akron scored with just 1:41 left in the teams' contest on Oct. 18. BG went a total of 1008:19 nearly 17 hours of match time without finding themselves behind on the scoreboard.
BGSU led the league in a veritable plethora of categories in 2018. In MAC play, BG paced the league in goals, assists, points, shots, shot percentage, fewest goals allowed, shutouts and lowest goals-against average.
The Falcons had 30 players on the 2018 roster. Hubert was named the MAC Offensive Player of the Year, while Kennedy took home MAC Defensive-Player-of-the-Year honors. Washington was named the United Soccer Coaches National Player of the Week on Sept. 25, and Abbitt and Duwve joined that trio on the All-MAC and all-region teams.
But, BG's success was the result of valuable contributions from a host of players on that 30-woman roster. Baeron was named MAC Tournament MVP after BGSU captured the title, and Nikki Cox, Nikhita Jacob and Jennifer Reyes joined Baeron on the MAC All-Tournament Team.
In 2018, BG scored 43 goals, tying the school record set the previous season. Four Falcons Hubert, Washington, Kennedy and Cox each had at least five goals and 19 points. Duwve was on a school-record pace for lowest GAA in a season prior to the NCAA Tournament match at PSU, and ended the year with a GAA of just 0.79.
Duwve had a miniscule GAA of 0.49 in MAC play, as she allowed only five goals in 927-plus minutes in league regular-season action, and had a saves percentage of .878. She led the MAC in GAA and saves pct., both overall and in MAC matches only.
Overall, Kennedy had 10 assists to tie Hubert for the team lead. The 2018 season marked the first time in program history that BG had two players with 10 assists each.
Ball joined Fannon's staff at BGSU after spending the previous two seasons at Concordia University in Seward, Neb. He served as graduate assistant goalkeeper coach for both the men's and women's program. Those two teams went a combined 57-18-8 over the last two seasons, as the men's team was 27-10-3 overall and 13-5 in Great Plains Athletic Conference (GPAC) play under head coach Jason Weides, while Greg Henson's women's program went 30-8-5 overall and 16-3-1 in the league in that span.
At Concordia, Ball helped sophomore 'keeper Lindsey Carley earn GPAC Defensive Player of the Year accolades along with first-team all-league and all-region honors as the Bulldogs won the league title with a 9-0-1 record. During Ball's two seasons at the school, a total of four different goalkeepers in the two programs earned all-conference honors.
The women's program captured the 2017 league regular-season title after winning the conference tournament the previous year. The '17 women's team set program records for fewest goals conceded and most clean sheets. The coaching staff was named United Soccer Plains Region College Staff of the Year last fall.
The men's team set a school single-season record for wins in '17, going 16-3-1. Goalkeeper Jack Bennett, one of those four 'keepers to earn All-GPAC honors during Ball's tenure, ranked in the top 20 among all NAIA goalkeepers in goals-against average a year ago.
"I couldn't be more excited to start at BGSU," said Ball at the time of his hiring. "The opportunity to coach and be challenged at the Division-I level is one I'm incredibly grateful for. Coach Fannon has done great things in his short time at BG and the staff is young and hungry for success, as is our team. Both Matt and (assistant coach) Cian (McDonald) have been incredible in welcoming me and I'm looking forward to learning from them both."
A graduate of Milligan College in Johnson City, Tenn., Ball served as an assistant women's soccer coach at his alma mater from July of 2015 to May of 2016. He worked closely with the team's goalkeepers with the Buffaloes, and under his tutelage, junior 'keeper Charlotte Stephens earned all-conference honors.
Off the pitch, Ball served as International Student Liaison at Milligan, a position he proposed and created which was focused on improving the international student experience. He oversaw 43 international students and was the principle point of contact in the assimilation of international students.
Ball was a four-year starter during his undergraduate career at Milligan, helping the Buffaloes to two Appalachian Athletic Conference titles while earning all-conference recognition in each of his last three seasons. Ball was a two-time team captain for the program.
Ball earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science with a minor in English at Milligan. He received a Master's in Business Administration from Concordia in May of 2018.
Asst. Women's Soccer Coach, Recruiting Coordinator
jessica.nei@utoledo.edu
Toledo
Division 1
Jessica Nei is entering her fourth season as an assistant coach for the University of Toledo womens soccer program in 2018.
Jessica is one of the brightest, young coaches out there and were very fortunate to have her on our staff, said Toledo head coach TJ Buchholz. The success of our recruiting is in large part because of the work that she has put in to build the program.
Nei focuses on the goalkeepers and defenders at Toledo and her defensive group has registered 15 shutouts in her time with the Rockets. In 2017, Nei mentored redshirt freshman goal keeper Madison Perrin to Mid-American Conference All-Freshman honors in her first year of action.
Additionally, senior defender Chiara Paradiso was selected second-team All-MAC and senior Regan Price was named to the all-tournament team after the Rockets clinched their league-best fifth conference championship. She previously mentored Sam Tiongson, who earned MAC Defensive Player of the Week honors on Sept. 21 after blanking Northern Kentucky in 2015.
Nei joined Toledo after serving as an assistant coach at Arkansas State from 2011-14. She helped the Red Wolves to their first winning season in school history in 2012.
While at ASU, Nei helped the RedWolves achieve some of the best goalkeeping in the Sun Belt Conference. The Arkansas State netminders ranked third in the league with 112 saves in 2013, and had a 1.38 goals against average in 2012, the second-lowest average in school history.
Individually, Nei helped mold Aja Aguirre into one of the most successful goalkeepers in Arkansas State history. Aguirre set the record for the lowest GAA (1.19) in 2012.
In 2013, Nei coached Amanda Lee to the third-most saves in school history with 92, and the third-lowest goals against average at 1.34. Her 8.07 saves per match average is tied for the most in school history. Before joining the Red Wolves, Nei spent three years at St. Cloud State University in St. Cloud, Minn. During her three seasons with St. Cloud, she helped the Huskies to a 28-21-8 record, including two 10-win seasons and the first winning record in school history.
Nei earned a bachelors degree with a double major in physical education and health education from NDSU in 2008 and received her masters in recreation and leisure administration from UT in 2016.
Assistant Coach
cobb1@kenyon.edu
Kenyon
Division 3
Katie Cobb enters her third year as assistant coach for the Ladies soccer program. Prior to coming to Gambier, she spent the previous two seasons at Clarkson University in Potsdam, New York, where the Golden Knights posted a combined record of 13-16-5 during her time.
Among her duties working with the Golden Knights, Cobb was in charge of training the teams goalkeepers, developing scouting reports, producing off-season workouts and teaching fitness. While at Clarkson, three different players collected Liberty League All-Star status and eight or more players annually garnered Liberty League All-Academic awards.
Prior to her work in New York, Cobb spent the 2014 season working as an assistant and goalkeeper coach for Middlebury College in Middlebury, Vermont. During that season, the Panthers had a 10-7-0 record and had two players named to the NSCAA All-Region team.
Aside from her collegiate work, Cobb gained coaching experience with the Seacoast United Soccer Club, Global Premier Soccer Maine and College ID Camps.
Cobb is a 2014 graduate of the University of Southern Maine, where she played as goalkeeper for 38 career games, earning 26 starts for the Huskies. In that span, she racked up nearly 2,900 minutes in goal, made 238 saves and produced a .785 save percentage. In 2013, she was named an All-Little East second team selection.
Assistant Coach
lremache@capital.edu
Capital
Division 3
Lila Remache is in her second year as the graduate assistant coach for Capital Womens Soccer in the 2018 season. Remache comes to Capital following a playing career at multiple NAIA schools.
In her first season with Capital, the Crusaders went 7-2-0 against OAC competition, granting them a first-round bye in the conference tournament. They finished OAC runners-up and put seven players on the all-conference team, including two first teamers.
Remache is no stranger to coaching after assisting with U9, U11 and U17 girls teams at the Capital City Streaks in Montgomery, Ala. between 2015-17. She was also a member of the ODP and EPD staff with the Alabama Soccer Association. Remache currently holds USSF D license as well as the U.S.C Goalkeeping diploma level 1 and 2.
Remache holds a bachelors degree in business administration/international business from Auburn-Montgomery, which she completed in 2016. She is a native of Taverny, France, where she played for Club Team Cosmo Taverny before transferring to FAS Herblay in the Womens French Division 2 League.
She is working toward her masters degree in business administration while at Capital. She is also playing semi-professionally with Columbus Eagles FC, which plays in the Womens Premier Soccer League.
Assistant Coach
marybeth@muskingum.edu
Muskingum
Division 3
Caudill serves as head coach of the Muskingum women's soccer team.
This enthusiastic and veteran coach is the all-time winningest coach in Muskingum womens soccer history and ranks in the top 10 all-time for career wins in the prestigious Ohio Athletic Conference. Over her successful tenure, Coach Caudill has guided the Muskies to record-breaking campaigns in which Muskingum set new school records for best start to a season, goals in a season, goals in a game, assists in a game, points in a game, shots in a game, consecutive shutouts, most wins, highest winning percentage for a season, fewest losses in a season and longest unbeaten streak.
Furthermore, numerous Muskies have garnered conference, regional and national honors under Caudills tutelage. Caudills excellence on the sidelines was recognized by the Ohio Collegiate Soccer Officials Association when they honored her with the Distinguished Excellence in Sports Merit Award for exhibiting sportsmanship and character before, during, and after matches. Caudill earned both her bachelors and masters degrees at Wright State University (WSU) in Dayton, Ohio. She served as a 2-year captain of the Raiders NCAA Division I womens soccer team and was a GTE Academic All-American and team MVP. Additionally, Caudill was recognized as the Raiders Student-Athlete of the Year in two consecutive years. In May of 2001, she was inducted to the WSU Athletic Hall of Fame, and in October of 2003 was inducted into the WSU Soccer Walk of Fame. In August of 1994, the West Carrollton, Ohio, native started her coaching career as the assistant womens soccer coach at WSU. Professionally, Caudill played five seasons in the W-League. She was a member of the Cincinnati Leopards, Cleveland Eclipse, and Cincinnati LadyHawks. She was honored by the league for her caliber of play by being named all-league and Player of the Week multiple times. Caudills amateur success as a striker includes three trips to the Donnelly Cup National Championship on the Ohio South Womens Open team, the last of which she guided the squad as a player/coach. She currently holds a United States Soccer Federation B coaching license and is a member of the United Soccer Coaches. Additionally, she holds a Level II NSCAA Advanced Goalkeeping Diploma.
Caudill, formerly Lengefeld, was married to Tom Caudill in July of 2003. They currently reside in New Concord, with their 13-year-old son, Tanner, and 11-year-old son, Ty.
Director of Soccer
nspell@heidelberg.edu
Heidelberg
Division 3
Career Synopsis
The 2018 season marks Spell's 13th year as the head coach of the Heidelberg women's soccer programCareer record stands at 69-138-17 (26-75-7 OAC)Spell is an Advanced National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) and United States Soccer Federation (USSF) "D" licensed coachHas coached 13 All-OAC and 29 Academic All-OAC performers during his tenure at the Berg
2017
Led the Student Princes to a 10-8-1 record, including a 4-5 OAC recordMentored Erica Campbell to All-Ohio Honors as a sophomore
2016
Coached the Student Princes to a 7-9-3 record, including a 2-6-1 mark in OAC playMentored seven Academic All-OAC student-athletes
2015
Led the Student Princes to an 8-11 record, including a 3-6 OAC recordCoached eight Academic All-OAC student-athletes
2014
Coached team to a 3-13-3 record (0-7-2 OAC)Mentored five Academic All-OAC student-athletes
2013
Led the Berg to a 3-14-2 mark (2-6-1 OAC)Coached GK Molly Schriber to 2nd team All-OAC accolades
2012
Guided team to 3-13-1 record, including a 2-7 mark in OAC action
2011
Coached the Student Princes to a 6-11-1 record (3-6 OAC)
2010
Led team to a 9-8-2 record (2-5-2 OAC)The nine wins marked the most by a Heidelberg women's soccer team since the 2000 seasonKelsey Hogan, Kristen Schneider and Michelle Gross each earn All-OAC honors
2009
Guided the Student Princes to a berth in the OAC Tournament and a 7-12-1 record (4-5 OAC)The OAC Tournament appearance was the first for the Student Princes since 1999
2008
Coached the Berg women to a 5-11-3 mark, including a 1-7-1 record in OAC matches
2007
Went 5-13 in his second season as head coach, including a 3-5 mark in Ohio Athletic Conference play
2006
In his first season, Spell coached his way to a 3-15 record (0-9 OAC)
2003-2005
Served as an assistant coach for both the men's and women's programs at his alma mater, Marietta CollegeHelped coach the women's team to a school-record 14 victories in the 2005 season
Collegiate Experience
2003 graduate of Marietta CollegePlayed four years of varsity soccer for the PioneersServed as team captain and was named the team's Most Valuable Player in both 2002 and 2003
Personal
Resides in TiffinRecieved masters of education from Marietta in 2005Spell is a board member of the Tiffin Soccer ClubActive with the River Valley Soccer Club (RVSC), coaching an under-15 boys as well as an under-11 and under-12 girls team out of Parkersburg, W.VaFollow the women's soccer program: Twitter - [@bergsoccer](https://twitter.com/bergsoccer)
Assistant Coach
coachbrooksey@outlook.com
Northern Kentucky
Division 1
Primarily working with the boys program at Northern Kentucky but have a great relationship with the womens program and enjoy helping them to search out new talent.
jason.w.good2@gmail.com
EXACT
NCAA
As part of our COVID-19 safety plan, the indoor sessions traditionally held on the first day of camp will be shared online.
Sessions will be accessible for the week prior to camp. They are available on-demand and can be completed at the athlete's
convenience.
This approach allows us to continue offering these valuable sessions so athletes arrive to camp ready to maximize the experience,
while still maintaining a safe experience.
Over 1000 different college coaches have attended EXACT's events.
See below for just a few of the coaches that attended recent events in this region.
mccarthys@denison.edu
Denison
Coaches Hired Weekly
As part of our COVID-19 safety plan, the indoor sessions traditionally held on the first day of camp will be shared online.
Sessions will be accessible for the week prior to camp. They are available on-demand and can be completed at the athlete's
convenience.
This approach allows us to continue offering these valuable sessions so athletes arrive to camp ready to maximize the experience,
while still maintaining a safe experience.
EXACT partners with college goalkeeper coaches to prioritize a premium experience for goalkeepers.
All GKs participate in individual keeper-specific training led by college GK coaches
Training focuses on all GK skills including footwork, shot stopping, crossing, and more; GKs receive a 1-on-1 evaluation based on their performance
In addition position-specific work, GKs also face live action observed by all college coaches
See what people are saying about EXACT!
Player
The EXACT Camp was really informative and challenging. The coaches were very honest and gave me some really good information and tips, which I really enjoyed it.
Overall, it was an excellent camp experience, wish I lived in America to visit more ID camps, coaches gave me much more coaching and training then my own coaches, so it was good to see that I can pick it up a bit to improve my overall performances. I have gone MENTALLLLL!!!!!!!
Player
I was very satisfied with the program and how it was run. Being new to these types of experiences and camps, I was happy to see how the staff was kind and helpful to all the athletes. I know that in the future if an opportunity like this swings around the corner I will have no trouble snatching it. I had an amazing time at this camp and hope it happens again. Thank you to all for hosting it. Also having celebrity's host a camp like this one makes it very special to a lot of the athletes.
Player
EXACT is a very good way to promote yourself if you are wanting to play at the next level. The most inspiring thing about EXACT is that they want everyone to believe in themselves, which goes a long way when you are trying to be your best.
The camp was very well run, and it is essential that everyone try to go to at least one EXACT camp while they still have the opportunity.
Player
I was actually so nervous going into the camp, but once I got the to camp all of my nervousness went away. The coaches were all very nice and the camp was a comfortable place with everyone being very supportive. Not only was it enjoyable, I was able to talk to the coaches one-on-one, and get honest and thoughtful feedback to improve my athletic abilities and talents.
Before attending the EXACT Camp, I was very uneducated about college soccer and didn't have a set school I was interested in, but this camp helped me have a better understanding of what to look for in the future.
Player
I had a great experience at the Chicago EXACT Soccer Camp. The one-on-one conversations with coaches was invaluable as was the overall coaching I received during training and games throughout the weekend. I plan to be back next year! On a side note please share with your staff how great they were when I went down with an injury on Sunday...torn ACL and surgery in my very near future, but having had the opportunity to showcase myself and meet the coaches and staff was the best experience I have ever had at any camp so far and I WILL be back next year.
Player
I really appreciated the atmosphere that EXACT Sports Elite Camp provided. Everyone was included in any drill or game we were doing. It was an awesome experience to meet girls I've never seen before early in the morning, practice drills and techniques with them, and play with them/against them later in the same day. It is very different than practicing with the same team every day, every year. It was an experience to go out on a field with complete strangers and interact with them on the field. I also loved the number of college coaches who were at the camp. Especially at my young age, I haven't yet focused on one or two schools yet, so having a wide variety coaches from different schools and levels was exactly what I needed and was looking for.
Player
EXACT offers a great experience that blends on field training in a college atmosphere with off field soft skills needed to help become a better candidate for recruitment. The coaches provide excellent, real world feedback to parents and athletes on what and what not to do. Overall its a great experience that provides insight that will serve the players and the parents well during the recruiting period.
Player
My EXACT camp experience was great. It was a wonderful learning experience in the perfect environment. The coaches and the EXACT staff made sure we focused on not only our skills and abilities that are crucial, but they also really focused on mental aspect of the game as well and I really enjoyed that.
Player
The staff, the players, and the coaches that were apart of this camp were such genuine and caring people that I really felt welcome when I stepped on the field. Also, it was just a really fun experience where I had the chance to interact with fellow soccer lovers and I learned so much. I have to give it 10 out of 10 soccer balls.
This is one of the first times I've had the opportunity to interact so closely with college coaches and it really opened up my eyes not only to the opportunities that are available to me, but also the personalities of these coaches. They truly care about the improvement and development of their players and it's so wonderful spending time with such professional and involved people.
Player
I loved the environment of the EXACT camp. It's so different from other camps because it takes into account the mental aspect of the game instead of just the physical aspect. The environment was friendly and welcome, and this camp gave me a giant boost of confidence whether for striking up a conversation with a college coach or just on the field. It was very informative and I feel like I'm on the right track for being recruited at a college that is the right fit for me. Thank you!
Player
I loved that I was able to communicate and work with a variety of different coaches. It was an eye opening experience and I was surprised how sociable I was with the other girls at the camp, because I am usually shy and don't want to talk to people. Thank you and two thumbs up to you for getting me out of my shell.
Player
I have been playing soccer since I was five years old. I am now 13 years old and I continue to love playing soccer, but lately I have been struggling. I had lost confidence in myself and I was always afraid to make mistakes which as a result I stopped taking risks and challenging myself. But, after attending EXACT Camp for just one day I was able to learn a lot of things. I learned that it is OK to take risks and just because I am a smaller player than other athletes does not mean I am not a strong player. EXACT Sports helped me get my confidence back and to be a more vocal player. I learned valuable lessons that I can take with me on and off the field. I learned so much in just one day. I wish the camp was all week long. Thank you again!
P.S. I already started looking into colleges.
Parent
My daughter had a great time. The coaches were professional and very approachable. The question and answer panel with the coaches was informative. There was more interaction between the players and coaches than I expected from attending other "camps". The coaches really made an effort to be available when not on the field. I would highly recommend this experience to others. Soccer players can never get enough exposure for a reasonable price, nor can they gain enough experience playing with girls that are unknown to them.
Player
I went to the first ID Camp in Philly. We were so encouraged that we attended this one in DC. I have always dreamed about 1) going to college and 2) playing soccer in college. I got to meet a lot of great coaches and athletes. I learned something new at each camp. I wish there were more camps close to me so we could attend more. I am a senior and need all the help I can get in hopes to find the right college. I loved how the coaches were there to help us and give us directions on the spot. My mentor Coach was Mike Eckberg. Towson is on my "dream" list - and we are now going to schedule a visit as he suggested. I am so excited and I know I still have a long road ahead, but every journey has a beginning. Even though I am getting started a little late, I feel like EXACT really has helped me come flying out of the gate!
Parent
I was impressed with the overall flow and their ability to adapt to adverse scheduling conflicts from the facility. This is a great opportunity for my daughter to see beyond the club and school soccer, and the annoying reminding from us. It helps keep her motivated and going in the direction she wants to go with this sport. We'll definitely return to future camps. I as a parent was able to network with parents of older girls as well which helps me greatly in the posit of my daughters goals.
Learn why EXACT Sports is the most trusted and top-rated training camp
Largest college coaching staff of any organization -- camp, tournament or club (bringing in 1000 amazing college coaches every year)!
Hugely successful supporters of high school athletes -- 70.2% of participants have gone on to play NCAA or NAIA college athletics.
Only training camp organization that has received funding from the NCAA.
Official behavioral training partner of US Soccer.
The only camp staff that has expertise in developing athletes from high school to college to pro (we also work with over 60 pro teams).
The only exposure organization that blends the 4 pillars of development through our mental training expertise (EXACT is funded by the National Institutes of Health).
This is a sample schedule. Registered athletes will receive a final schedule prior to camp.