This is reassuring. |
Gonzaga has a great football team, so this makes no sense. |
| Is there a separate place in the cafeteria for varsity athletes? Someone told me this and it was unclear on our tour. |
No |
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All,
This is a brand new idea…so it’s safe to say that whatever SJC promoted in the arts or STEM or whatever won’t be impacted immediately. I think others have alluded to the bigger risk. If this new national sports team model is successful for football, then one has to think they will extend it to baseball, basketball, LAX, hockey etc al. So that means an additional 200 student slots will be taken by athletes…which mean there are 200 fewer students that want to do arts or robotics or whatever non-sport ECs. I have to believe they are doing this because they are losing top athletes to sports-focused academies like St James, IMG et al…and new ones seem to be popping up every day. |
Exactly. This has potential to be a long term problem. Maybe not so much in the short term. |
Yes sports is part of academics. It’s literally a career. Do you know how many people work for the NFL. NBA, MLB who will never play professionally? What is wrong with having a passion even if it’s not for a career? Out of inside of your mouth you’ll complain about obesity and mental heath, then the other complain about the exact thing that prevent it. You have a chip on your shoulder with respect to sports and your opinion is not shared. |
WWJD? Gonzaga had to create a whole school (Washington Jesuit) to help kids be prepared for the academics. Also, San Miguel help kids teach their potential It’s literally what we are compelled to do as Catholics. Help others reach their potential and give them love and support. Catholic schools have a long history of doing this through sports and they are growing their arts. I actually think sports and arts contribute to society more positively than a Wall Street Chad or a lawyer. This was a part of the Catholic mission. |
I have 2 dyslexic kids and one did Benilde and one did Ryken at GC. It’s absolutely not full of athletes. |
This mom is mad and misinformed all around. |
The AOL founder went to St. John’s and has donate a lot of money for STEM so no, STEM is not going away. 200 athletes is some insane madd up number Relax mom and m sorry if your just bitter your child didn’t get in but they will be fine. |
NP. SJC is very easy for admissions LOL. |
It’s adding up the number of athletes (including the 70 new football athletes) for all the sports where it’s reasonable to have national teams (including some women’s teams). Football and baseball alone put you at 100 athletes. Nobody said STEM is going away…but if you don’t increase overall attendance at SJC it will definitely change the school. |
I suspect this is likely one of the root causes of the shift in SJC's views. You also have the recent appearance of football academies on the local scene like Loudoun Football Academy and the TSJ academy (the Good Counsel - TSJ score was a big wake up call for them). And this is an attempt to compete with those schools for parents that might be all in on that nonsense but still want their son's to be at a real school. This isn't some new occurrence. Basketball has been doing this for decades and now it is seeping down into other sports. Where there is money, there is a way. Of course, what ends up happening is SJC will (at least for football) will be kicked out of the WCAC just like St. Frances was and play a vagabond schedule traveling the country. Some kids will really benefit from this by getting scholarships but a majority will be left by the wayside once high school is over. |
This type of thing has been going on for basketball for at least 25 years when Hargrave Academy (with Stu Vetter) was coaching top 5 ranked HS basketball teams. This isn't any different than IMG, Spire, what the St. James wants to be, etc. I don't see how there is money in this type of school but there has to be otherwise they wouldn't last. There will be some schools that make it but there will be a lot of bad actors out there taking advantage of kids and delusional parents - the AAU circuit is filled with these type of programs. What's the old adage a fool and money are soon parted. Shrugs shoulders. |