No I would not say that. MLS academies are fully funded and I know many people who also get scholarships from their club. If you are truly, exceptionally talented you will not be left out. |
True, unless you play for a school in the Power Five conference (or Notre Dame) or a school that has voluntarily adopted the Power Five rule (which prohibits coaches from reducing or eliminating athletic scholarships for reasons related to athletic performance). This is an important thing to research for any family that requires athletic $$ in order to be able to afford the cost of a school. |
At the end of the day college soccer is just an extended 1- 5 years of pay to play. Prove me wrong with facts not just by saying you disagree or I dont get it. Playing for a college team and paying tuition is the next step up from trying out for Arlington making the team and paying the fees. Not all kids are good enough to make Arlington they then drop down to BRYC to play. |
And I think you underestimate the difficulty in making a Power 5 soccer team. You can research till the cows come home but above all you have to be talented enough to even get an offer for a team, THEN you still have to have the grades to et into the school. There are no "paper classes" for underperforming student athletes not playing football or basketball. You have to be both talented enough to make the team and still have the grades at a rough equivalent level of normal applying students. Yes, athletes have a GPA admissions cushion but not all enjoy the same level of cushion across all sports. |
| ^^I’m aware of what Power Five recruiting, play, admissions, and academics are like. I mentioned the P5 rule in response to the comment that kids can get their scholarships taken away when a better player shows up. That’s the way it used to be across the board and still is at many schools, and most of the soccer parents I speak to are not aware of the changes. Even some with very talented kids do not understand how much more valuable a scholarship is at one of the schools that follow the Power Five rule compared to those that don’t. Many of schools outside those conferences have opted to follow the rule, and as far as I know there is no list advertising which ones have and have not. My comments can be taken as a PSA for those who may be new to the recruiting scene. |
Yes, but the Power 5 rule applies to very few players because the difficulty of making a Power 5 roster are pretty slim for most kids. That is the point. |
There are a good number of boys from the DMV playing soccer in the ACC and Big Ten most years. |
Not the point but you don't care. |
Great. We need more hedge fund managers. Not. |
They go on the run youth clubs and swindle thousands of dollars from parents selling them dream of playing in college. |
This!! I have a recruited athlete in another sport (50 percent scholarship) but if my second kid got a spot in a soccer roster with no $ I would be thrilled for him to be able to keep playing in college. The academic support and structure imposed by team would be very valuable to him. |
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To the OP, my HS senior plays for a CCL club.
Every player who intended to go onto collegiate soccer got onto a D3 roster. Two got D2 offers. One got D1 (AFA). As someone else posted, getting an offer is only step 1. Your child must also get accepted (step 2). As a parent, step 3 is always: what is affordable? My child got academic scholarships from every college that accepted him; a mixture of D1 & D3. The D3s offered a roster slot. |
Said the dad whose kid didnt get a commitment. They almost Always come with money and many other perks of being an athlete in school. |