There was one freshman on V last year and he did 8th grade twice and is the only sophmore on V this year. Is that who you are thinking of? |
Too bad not all PT players even made it to DJO baseball this year. I would be very upset that they brought in transfers too. Isn't that why people pay for primetime? |
Agree. Its terrible for the kids who put in all the work for the past 2 years and now likely wont have a Varsity letter for college apps. |
There's supposed to be a separation of Primetime and DJO or Primetime and Yorktown. Parents should start to question, loudly, if that is actually happening. |
There is separation if PT kids aren't making these teams. |
No need to jump to conclusions. I feel for the kids who work hard, are good players and don’t make the team. Enough things to be stressed out about and struggle with as a teenager. |
Did any non-freshman primetime kids get cut? |
The top athletic WCAC schools are increasingly moving to a “college” model where they now play a decent percent of national games (football plays 60% of schedule national…basketball is like 30% but the DMV has many top 50 national teams, so you don’t have to travel more…etc.). These schools will increasingly rely on more lateral transfers to compete with Mater Dei and other national powerhouses, both for the competitive boost and the significant NIL $$$$s. Mater Dei signed a multi-million $$$ NIL deal (paid to the school) last year and others are looking to adopt the model. I guess the issue is if BOC is really in the same league or not…though if SJC et al bring in lateral transfers, then the displaced kids will be looking for a new home at the BOCs of the world I guess. |
This is not beneficial to the mental and physical health of teens. A shame. |
Do kids going to a WCAC school really need that varsity letter on the college app? |
No...the reality is that if you aren't a recruited athlete, then just playing a sport is a line item on the app, but nobody cares much (and if not recruited, they don't care if you played Varsity of JV or a Club sport...it's an activity). |
This is just blatantly incorrect. Colleges 100% know what it takes to be part of a varsity sport versus attending the inner peace club activity. |
It's not blatantly incorrect...colleges really don't care that much about a sporting activity unless you are a recruited athlete...this isn't the 80s/90s. Colleges care you do something vs. nothing, but they don't really give a shit if you play on the Varsity baseball team...and in fact probably think it's a little better that you are captain of the Club Rugby team. They would certainly prefer you take leadership roles in debate or robotics or something else vs. being an anonymous COG on some varsity athletic team. |
I'm sure you want to believe that, but in personally working with college counselors I know that your belief is incorrect. Colleges are looking for well-rounded students including those with high-commitment extracurricular activities. Varsity sports (for non-recruited athletes) demonstrate that via dedication, leadership and the ability to balance time-consuming schedules with academics. A student who has 2 years of a sport, then a drop off with no other high-commitment extracurricular activity is at a disadvantage. It is unlikely that one of these students who was just dropped is all of a sudden going to pick up robotics or become debate team captain if that was not already something they were involved in. |
| Who says the kid cut from baseball didn't fill that time with something else, like babe ruth baseball, their travel baseball team, a job etc.? |