You are completely disregarding the amount of work that it takes to get a legitimate offer from a coach. Of course, once an athlete has an offer getting admitted to the school can be simplified or easier. I suggest you have your kid(s) take advantage of the athletic hook if it is so easy. |
My D3 athlete committed in July and was told it was ok to announce. The Ivys are not all the same. Penn will allow an early public announcement, but Princeton won’t. |
At the school where my kid committed, she received a positive pre-read but the actual decision will come when EDs are released generally. |
Nobody really cares if you announce you are committed. Actually, all Ivy schools allow people to announce their commitments. I mean, I can search a baseball recruiting website right now and tell you what which 2026 grads have announced their commitments to Princeton (5 of them BTW). |
Verbal commitments. And I'm sure that there is a percentage - maybe small - that announce verbal commitments and don't make it through the admissions process. Admission may seem pro forma after a verbal committment but admission is not guaranteed. |
I doubt it. I have never seen any Ivy athlete not get accepted who was committed in Fall of their senior year of HS. I have known some where the coach de-committed and they never applied. Well, I take that back…I knew one kid where they had applied in early September and they were verbally told they weren’t going to get admitted in time they could still ED elsewhere. This was a kid who was committed based on a senior schedule that they subsequently changed to be much less rigorous when they actually applied. I have never seen a committed Ivy athlete get surprised in mid-December with a formal rejection. |
Thanks for providing an example of an athlete committed to an Ivy that was verbally rejected. I also know of an example of this happening. So we agree. |
More like an applicant who (like other applicants) has top grades/scores, won Math competitions, published research AND IN ADDITION is a strong basketball players. MIT has an enviable pool of extremely qualified applicants larger than available slots. |
This year Blair Magnet sent 11 students (out of 105 senior class) to MIT. They are all well qualified; don't believe anyone was recruited as an athlete. |
At at least some D3s, it is possible to get a pre-read/"likely" before formally applying. |
Can’t count on this, coaches leave and offers go away. |
I know a committed athlete to an Ivy who lost her spot when the coach got fired. Happens, quite often |
| My DS recently committed to Carleton. He received an email from admissions saying he was admitted contingent on a few things, including applying ED, keeping up his GPA, and not changing his hs course choices to be less rigorous. |
That’s because the school/new coach decommitted from her. It’s common that a new coach wants their own recruits. Again, this isn’t someone who applies and then is blindsided in December by a rejection. |
Not really. Plenty of MIT athletes have little more than high grades and high test scores. They need to know you have the mental chops to do well, but the school (and definitely the coach) don’t care if your sport was your EC |