| Ivies you commit to the admissions process not just commit to the school and they let you in. |
sure they do. they let admissions give the bad news and move on. |
Not hard if they really want you. |
| Yes, always go where you are wanted and cast a wide net do not limit recruiting to just D1. Make sure check out DIII and DII schools too! |
| hearing the DIII NESCACS are harder to get in over most Ivies! |
Losing players at the 11th hour (when the rest of the recruit class is fully committed) makes a coach’s life harder, not easier. A coach has no incentive to do this. |
| JJust know that being committed to any school does not guarantee admission to any school, especially an Ivy League, Stanford, MIT, etc. The majority of players around here will not be recruited to those high academic schools, so this is not a widespread concern. Good luck even getting recruited- only 3% of players even make it D1. |
It happened to a local kid last year. Was “committed” to an Ivy and was basically told you’re not getting in and he ended up flipping. |
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Kids flip for various reasons, and these are often not the reasons people think they know or gossip about. Most players are not being recruited by Ivy League schools, Stanford, or MIT—maybe one-two a year from the DMV. Every player moves on and figures it out. It is usually not the end of the world, and they land a spot somewhere else.
Although most are just commitment flips, even some mentioned here were flips, not Early Decision situations or cases of receiving an Early Decision rejection letter, as this post implied. It would be different if kids were getting rejected and then left without a roster spot, but that is not the outcome of any commitment flips or admissions that do not pan out for kids around here. Good luck to all the 2027 and 2028s! The recruiting journey can be unpredicatable and interesting. |
its only 11th hour to the player. the coach already know. |
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If a player is on the bubble academically
and can’t get across the goal line, that’s on the player (not the coach). |
| It happens. Between Mens and womens lax, probably 5-7 commits probably fail their Ivy pre-reads each year. The difference you will know in July/August if you didn't get in usually, you don't have to wait until December. |
Academic bar at the top NESCACs can be higher than for the Ivies. |