Says the short kid in the back. |
| Op says this like it’s a wide open side door into an elite college. Something like 3% of high school football players make a D1 roster. If that’s your strategy to get in, you’re probably better off just sticking to the classroom stuff to go in the front door. |
If they're working hard both in the classroom and on the field, at a very rigorous school, then please, tell me, why don't they deserve to go to a good school as much as your one-dimensional kid? The difference between a 3.5 and 4.0 at St. Albans just describes the difference between choices and well-balanced kids vs. narrow strivers. Why would the latter continue more to a community? Let me answer that: they don't. |
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My eldest got two non sport related serious concussions. Consequences were devastating
Current studious 8th grader tracking to clock in at 6’5”, fit and strong. I’m not giving him a helmet. I’m giving him an oar. It’s a more competitive path, and he might not get recruited, but his head will be safe. My two older children never played competitive sports. I didn’t resent the recruits, but can understand why people want athletic recruitment removed from admissions. Until that happens, #3 can row his guts out. He started this year and loves it. |
This. So stupid people are saying I know someone who did this! Of course this happens: on occasion and for amazing athletes.NO ONE is getting in like this without being a stellar athlete AND OP is saying she knows several like this. She does not. |
NP and she might. These kids might be from a huge football school and OP doesn’t even realize it. My kid went to a public powerhouse where kids were recruited. They were huge, athletic and smart. Those are the kids who had their pick of schools. My son didn’t play through senior year because although he was 6 feet tall and big, he wasn’t big enough or athletic enough to get any real play time. It’s your entire life to never see minutes in a game. Anyone can’t just “play football” then have a choice of colleges. |
She said these players were not spectacular. This did not happen. |
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I think what prompted the OP's comment is just in football there are some true anecdotes of kids never having played prior to Junior year of HS...to then getting recruited to an Ivy school to play.
Yes, the kids are good athletes...they have to be. However, can anyone give any other sport where you go from zero to a recruited football player in a year? The kid referenced from Jackson-Reed is a true story. The only reason the kid was able to even play football is because the JR football team is horrible. The coach walks the halls and approaches any kid that has the size profile for football and begs them to play. The team gets blown out by every DCPS football team...which has one or two decent teams, but even those teams would get destroyed by a WCAC team. I do agree that Ivy football is really D3 football (even though technically D1). While the Penn baseball team can hang with the UVA baseball team (lost 4-2 in the College World Series Regionals), the UVA football team would beat the Penn football team by at least 50 points. More accurately, the game would never happen because of the fear that multiple Penn players would suffer serious injury because of the size differential. |
I'm the OP and yes, I do. I never said the kids were not stellar athletes. I thought my point was clear: they are big, tall, athletic kids. What they are not is long-term football players or all-state type players. They're a lot like the Jackson Reed kid. Played a season or two of football (at a middle-of-the-road or even crummy team at a high academic prep school), started going to summer recruitment camps, got a lot of interest from Ivy programs, received an offer from at least one. These are kids I know very well so I know their full story. And I'm not making this up--I have no reason to. |
Having a kid who is recruited, having heard from numerous ivy league coaches, you are lying or do not know the whole whole story. |
You also claimed these same kids had offers from BC, UVA and Duke, which are all P5 schools. There is no way prep school kids with one or two years experience from school with “crummy” football program arebeing recruited at P5 schools. Your story is made up, op, just admit it. |
Gonzaga isn’t actually academically elite either. |
What's cornell? It was a mistake that it got into the Ivy league. |
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OP obviously embellished their story, as I'm sure it's tough to get recruited to Duke and BC for football.
But football is hugely helpful getting into Ivies or top SLACs. These are big teams, particularly when drawing from student bodies of a couple thousand at SLACs or 15,000 or so at Ivies. And the challenge for these colleges is that most smart parents don't let their smart kids play football anymore (out of fear that a football injury can make a smart kid into a dumb and psychological or). You might need something more than a pulse to get recruited to one of these teams, but not much more. |
Again, this “no one plays football argument” isn’t really true in most of the country, it’s mostly an upper middle class DMV thing. There are plenty local Catholic schools in DC and Maryland with very strong football programs. |