I am not disagreeing with you, but something doesn't add up. If you are in a demanding DMV athletic conference...let's take WCAC...and you are a varsity, 3 sport athlete (nearly impossible, but go with me)...well, you are getting recruited for something. I guess if you only participate in no-cut sports like XCountry, Indoor Track and Track...well maybe. There are very few demanding HS athletic conferences in the entire US...so maybe that is the disconnect. |
Actually, there were a few issues that went into the process of withdrawing his commitment and closing his recruitment altogether. He had sustained serious injuries after committing early, and during the lengthy recovery, he began to prioritize identifying a Top 5 program in his area of interest, at a Top 25 university, but one where he would have an outsized college experience, too. The list of “perfect schools” became small. Those injuries and a realization that the time commitment necessary to continue playing at a high level would prevent him from pursuing a major that he wasn’t willing to bypass (and that is related to his injuries, ironically) were enough to course correct. He was told specifically when committing that certain majors would be off limits. He didn’t take that seriously at the time (my theory) or realize how much that would matter. Prioritizing academics is a difficult choice when you’ve been devoting that much time to something outside the classroom, and I wish it would have worked out differently, but life is full of trade-offs. D1 programs would have consumed his college experience. D3 programs wouldn’t have even provided the college experience he wanted for himself. Knowing that he had to make a really tough choice, we were not terribly surprised that he made what will probably turn out to be the smart one. |
Got it. I am not espousing this...but assuming he could claim to have recovered from the injuries, he could have gotten recruited to a top school and then just decided not to play once he showed up. I think your kid falls into a 3rd category...it's like someone who wins the Olympics but suffers a career-ending injury...you are in the top 0.5% of all athletes in your sport and would be coveted by every school on the planet if you wanted to continue playing. Now, maybe the school is CMU...which has no baseball team. Obviously, the school has to have your sport in order to get recruited for it (or you are an Olympic gold medal ice skater and the school wants you because you are world famous), |
It’s Baltimore’s private school MIAA A conference, which has teams ranked in the top ten nationally for soccer, football, squash, and lacrosse, among others. And plenty of kids play on varsity teams in those sports who are not recruited so not sure where you are going with that. |
Which three sports (BTW…squash really can’t be included here)? I don’t know a single Spaulding baseball varsity starter that plays three sports…almost none play two. Nearly all the staters are committed. I know the Gilman football QB played another sport and is in fact a D1 commit. There is no varsity starter in three sports that isn’t a commit for one of them. Again…a starter not someone who just makes the team. BTW…the league doesn’t have a top ranked football team. Good Counsel is the only team in the DMV ranked in the top 30. Soccer doesn’t matter at all because literally all top HS aged athletes play for academy teams and can’t play for their HS teams. |
Calvert Hall was ranked the top soccer team in the country a year or two ago. The Academy kids here get waivers to play, it’s very common. In any case, you don’t know as much about the teams here as you’d like to think. It’s also strange that you think sports participation counts only if a kid is best on the team. Yes, for recruiting purposes. But otherwise, no. Making varsity in multiple sports is itself an accomplishment, and a huge commitment of time. |
Adding at most of the schools in this conference for team sports, at least half of the varsity starter (or more) aren’t D1 recruits. Including baseball. If that was the case at Spaulding this year, it’s a rare exception. |
I didn’t say there wasn’t a top ranked HS soccer team….just that nobody pays attention to HS soccer because so many top HS players don’t play for their team. Which three sports. I don’t know of any varsity starters at any school in the MiAA that plays three sports….i barely know anyone playing two sports. Either put up or shut up. |
I understand that…but nobody is a three sport varsity athlete at one of these schools, actually plays, and happens to be average in all three (yet again, gets to play). I get there are plenty of kids playing one sport and aren’t recruited. |
Again, you don’t know what you are talking about l |
True and it’s 4 nights of practice and games with lots of travel, showcases u sometimes need to miss school. It is a huge time commitment. This is mainly the boys’ side though with mlsnext, not the ecnl teams. My sons both dropped HS soccer after sophomore year cause you can’t do both. |
It’s different in Baltimore. Even Jacob Murrell played high school soccer. |
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The military academies give points for varsity sports (certain sports more so than others) and more points to captains.
The sports show leadership. No matter where your student is applying. But I agree, they need to have more than just a sport (if unrecruited). All that said, the reason to play high school sports is not for the college applications. It’s all the intangibles that you know about if you played a sport yourself
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A girl from our W school got into Stanford. She played two varsity sports and had great grades. Not sure what the hook was but not a recruited athlete. |
At least that’s what the marketers of travel sports say! Sports are a great way for kids to spend some free time but it’s not all that impressive that a teen plays sports unless they are good enough to play in college. Admissions understand that a lot of parents think that sports look good on an application so they sign their kid up. There has to be more to it. |