Kari Hancock

If you live in Alaska and want to be recruited for college equestrian, you have two choices: Travel the country or get a YouTube account.

Just ask Anchorage’s Kari Hancock.

The 17-year-old Alaska state champion handled her own PR by creating a YouTube account and emailing links to colleges all over the country in an attempt to gain a coach’s attention.

“It’s a lot of sending in videos,” she told me. “I couldn’t travel Outside as much as other rides trying to make a college team, so I videotaped every single time I was in competition and tried to show Outside as much as possible, just to get that extra exposure.”

At first, Hancock started correspondence with a half dozen schools. Then it was narrowed down to Texas Christian University, Southern Methodist University and Kansas State.

In the end, TCU contacted her.

Hancock, of South High fame, signed her letter of intent with the NCAA D1 school last week. But the offer came several weeks ago via email.

“I had woken up in the middle of the night and checked my phone because I couldn’t sleep,” she said. “I saw an email and went screaming into my parent’s bedroom to wake them up to say that I had finally gotten a spot on a college equestrian team.”

It was 4 a.m.

Hancock has been a competitive equestrian rider for nearly nine years, winning multiple state championships along the way in addition to traveling to California for HITS Thermal, where she said she was top eight in almost every class.

Her horse is a thoroughbred named Nick.

“I spend every day with him,” Hancock said. “He’s been my best friend for the last seven years. He’s really jealous when I spend time with another horse. He has this huge personality; doesn’t let me get away with anything. It’s kind of funny – he’s almost more human than horse.”