Yeah, some private MS coach is trolling this board to make sure his studs in MIDDLE SCHOOL don't leave.
Let's be honest - this entire topic is probably a fabrication. I mean, who brags about their son's MS exploits on the Internet? |
Yes, this Board really should be reserved for what it does best - allowing striver mothers to brag about their 4-year olds WPPSI scores and other pre-school exploits . . . |
Not a Sidwell person here, but the thrust of the original post was that the poster was worried that her son wouldn't get recruited if he went to an independent school. In that sense, it doesn't really matter what club the sidwell grads playing Ivy League soccer played for--it shows at a minimum that playing for a club and an independent school (here, Sidwell) doesn't hurt the ability to get recruited. I would also argue that coming from an academically well-regarded school such as Sidwell (or STA or Exeter or Roxbury Latin or Lawrenceville or what have you) may well ease the atlete's path at admissions, because the school's rigor is well-established. |
I am one of the posters who would like to know the sport and it has nothing to do with kids getting plucked from our school. It has more to do with the fact that I think OP is a troll. For the majority of sports recruiting happens at the club level, through summer leagues, tournaments, regional and national leagues and AAU. As for the rest of your post, I have a DD who attends a big 3. She and several friends are in the process of being recruited right now. The school has had nothing to do with it. It is all about their involvement with strong local clubs. This is where recruiters are looking for athletes and this is true for the majority of sports. Unless OP's son plays football her best bet is to get him on the strongest club team she can. |
Okay, clearly a fake original post. Sorry I wasted time reading it and trying to give a thoughtful/helpful reply. Live and learn. |
Agree with most of this--do pursue the strong club team--but I will also say college coaches will still often call the HS coach, sometimes to discuss things like temperament, ability to balance school and sports, or other issues where seeing the kid 5-6 days a week in a school setting can be helpful. Not to overemphasize this though; I agree with the quoted poster that for most sports the center of gravity for recruiting has shifted to the club scene. |
If the school doesn't have a team [or a normal team] then the student is not getting practical game experience for the next level. The OP's son is in grade 8 at a Big 3 as defined by DCUM: STA, GDS, Sidwell. At STA [IAC] a HS varsity player can have a complete experience. Sidwell has some standard teams for it's league [MAC]. Admissions offices and coaches know what they are getting. So I guess OP's kid is at GDS. Time to move on if the school doesn't offer EC's/sports programs that will benefit the DC. Tuition is high and at some colleges over 20% of students are on varsity athletic teams. |
| This is BS. If OP's son is playing for a club team then he is likely playing year round. He is getting practical game experience on a regular basis with and against players who are as good as he is. Even students from GDS have gone on to play sports in college because these days recruitment is club driven, not school driven. |
PP here. $32, 675 should result in a parent not having to pay outside organizations for sports. Unless the sport doesn't exist at the school. Plus the student has travel team and in-school sports time. http://www.gds.org/podium/default.aspx?t=122750 |
| If someone is trying to get serious recruiting attention for athletics, why on earth would any parent send them to either GDS or Sidwell? |
You seem confused. Travel team=club team=outside organization for sports. I a kid is playin travel then they're using an outside org. You also seem to be confused about the realities of athletic recruiting. Whether you pay 32K or send your DC to public the chances of being recruited from your school team alone are extremely slim. The recruiting happens through the club organizations and to suggest that paying 32K should in any way guarantee that your child is recruited is a bit ridiculous. It takes a lot of time, practice and hard work to get a student to that point and that's not going to happen at school. |
| 10:47 Maybe you think so but 85% of the players on my son's club soccer team attend private school. |
| 11:35, That's because rich white kids play soccer in this area, and rich white kids are the majority at most private non-Catholic schools in this area. One downside of club sports is that it is another means by which affluent kids have opportunities others don't. And understanding the money factor in club sports is alSo why college coaches still watch film--to be able to get the kids without the $$$$ or parental support to do club, who might otherwise fall through the cracks. But I don't disagree that for a sport like soccer, the recruiting is overwhelmingly via the club route. The mix is different for other sports, however. |
I am the poster of the post you quoted. I agree with your post. That's kind of what I was trying to get at, so thanks for clearing it up. |
You obviously need to be informed about the realities of recruiting; virtually ALL (besides football) recruiting is done outside of school. For soccer, it's all about club teams, for lacrosse it's about recruiting camps and events and tournaments, tennis is about tournaments and rankings etc..... You don't go to a high school so you can be recruited directly from it by a college. Granted, you may want to choose a school that fosters a more competitive athletic environment, but speaking strictly of recruiting, it doesn't matter. |