| My student had offers from D3s and tiny D1s as an athlete. Academically, she was accepted to multiple T30 “sweatshirt” schools. Ultimately, she decided on one of those and has no regrets. Her school’s club and intermural teams are full of kids who were in the same situation. She received merit aid from her school and is playing sports for fun while majoring in engineering. |
This.
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Yes, most of the kids we know in D1 were “undecided” or sociology. The few who went in as STEM majors switched by second semester.
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What is a sweatshirt school? |
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| It goes both ways. Over this weekend at my DS's well regarded private school, the best senior on the boys soccer team, who is strong academically, committed to a regional D3 public university to keep playing. My mind was blown. |
I think this seems more typical of a strong athlete who loves the sport (sport over academics) unless the kid is very top in academics. |
That’s really common in boy’s soccer. Most of the commits you see in the area aren’t top schools. Those schools are near impossible for a 17-18 year old American kid. Some rosters are all international, transfer portal players. |
It’s very very different on the girl’s side. |
+1 Went to see Dartmouth mens soccer play Cornell last year and when they introduced the starting lineup there was only one American starting for Dartmouth -- rest of lineup was international. And that is a no-scholarship school in the middle of nowhere New Hampshire. |
It’s a term that’s been in common usage for nearly fifty years. |
If your kids is bright and recruit material, they should just find an Ivy or academic d3 they like and target it. |
Why didn't she recruit to her ED school? Was it D1? |
Plenty of top academic D3 and D1 schools. |
You can leave the sport after getting recruited. |