Recruiting runs on numbers. Plan.Set.Goal makes those numbers something a college coach can actually trust — by verifying where each one came from and who stands behind it.
A 40 time, a vertical, an exit velocity, a GPA — recruiting decisions ride on stats like these. But most of them are self-reported, and they're often inflated, inconsistent from one site to the next, or impossible to confirm. College coaches know this, so they discount what they can't verify — and families end up making scholarship-level decisions on shaky numbers.
Plan.Set.Goal's entire architecture is built to fix that. Every number carries proof of where it came from and who stands behind it.
MetriX is your verified athletic development record — built only from signals that can be checked, never from self-claimed numbers alone. Here's what feeds it:
Sets, reps, and weights a coach signed off on — not numbers typed in after the fact.
Combine numbers — 40s, verticals, exit velocity — timed by a coach or measured by hardware.
Performances from real games at real schools, not self-entered box scores.
How your numbers line up against published recruiting benchmarks for your sport, position, and division.
You logged it yourself.
A coach signed off on it.
It came from a real game.
Measured by a device or independently confirmed.
The higher the tier — and the more verified data you have — the tighter the confidence range on your score. Sparse or unverified data doesn't lower your MetriX; it simply widens the range until there's enough proof to narrow it. Every score is shown with that range and its verification level, so a recruiter sees exactly how much to trust it.
Engagement — logins, streaks, daily activity — never affects your MetriX. Neither do unverified self-reports as a primary signal. MetriX answers one question: what can a recruiter actually trust? So it only counts what can be verified.
A typical recruiting profile lets an athlete type in any number they want. Plan.Set.Goal starts from the opposite end — a number only counts once a coach, a game, or hardware backs it up. The result isn't a longer list of stats. It's a shorter list that holds up.
Find a coach, log verified workouts, and turn real training into a record colleges can trust.
Curious what happens to your athlete's data? Read: Your Data. Your Choice. →