Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going to a low rated high school greatly increases your chance of playing varsity. Look at great schools ratings and pick a low rated one for high school.
If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Black kids there could be a lot of competition to play basketball. If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Hispanic kids there could be a lot of competition to play soccer.
So it’s one thing if you’re talking about lacrosse at Lewis but another if you’re talking about basketball at Hayfield.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have not played sports and this is all new to us. Our son is a sophomore and got selected for Junior Varsity baseball at his HS. He loves baseball but an average player at best. We are really glad he is able to make the team.
Can anyone who is knowledgeable with HS sports please advice:
1. Do all the players selected for JV get to play in the games this season?
2. Next year as a Junior can he still play JV or his only shot at playing is going to be at varsity level?
3. How difficult is a jump from JV to varsity?
4. Do players take private practice or is it just whatever practice they get at school?
Thanks
1. The JV players play on the JV team. Whether a particular player gets much playing time depends on how good he is compared to other players on the team. If he's a weaker player on a JV team, he might just get to play if his team either has a big lead or is far behind.
2. If your player is average and makes JV as a sophomore, it's more likely that he'd cut next year than that he'd play on JV again as a junior. Usually juniors are only JV if it's their first year playing at a school and the coaches want to see if the player has development potential. If your son's case, they'll be able to make that assessment this yar.
3. A good JV player has a chance to make varsity as a junior or senior.
4. At the high school level many players may be working with private coaches on the side but it's not mandatory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going to a low rated high school greatly increases your chance of playing varsity. Look at great schools ratings and pick a low rated one for high school.
If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Black kids there could be a lot of competition to play basketball. If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Hispanic kids there could be a lot of competition to play soccer.
So it’s one thing if you’re talking about lacrosse at Lewis but another if you’re talking about basketball at Hayfield.
I assume PP means low rated for their individual sport.
Don't look at the racial demographics, look at how the team has done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Going to a low rated high school greatly increases your chance of playing varsity. Look at great schools ratings and pick a low rated one for high school.
If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Black kids there could be a lot of competition to play basketball. If it’s a low rated school with a lot of Hispanic kids there could be a lot of competition to play soccer.
So it’s one thing if you’re talking about lacrosse at Lewis but another if you’re talking about basketball at Hayfield.
Anonymous wrote:Going to a low rated high school greatly increases your chance of playing varsity. Look at great schools ratings and pick a low rated one for high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've also seen JV players being "pulled up" to Varsity late in the season. I don't know what the roster rules are(does someone on Varsity have to leave the team?), but it happened on my DS' JV basketball team and my other DS' JV baseball team. In both cases, towards the end of the season, the best player was all of a sudden playing Varsity.
This doesn’t happen a lot. Temper expectations.
Anonymous wrote:I've also seen JV players being "pulled up" to Varsity late in the season. I don't know what the roster rules are(does someone on Varsity have to leave the team?), but it happened on my DS' JV basketball team and my other DS' JV baseball team. In both cases, towards the end of the season, the best player was all of a sudden playing Varsity.
Anonymous wrote:I've also seen JV players being "pulled up" to Varsity late in the season. I don't know what the roster rules are(does someone on Varsity have to leave the team?), but it happened on my DS' JV basketball team and my other DS' JV baseball team. In both cases, towards the end of the season, the best player was all of a sudden playing Varsity.
Anonymous wrote:I have not played sports and this is all new to us. Our son is a sophomore and got selected for Junior Varsity baseball at his HS. He loves baseball but an average player at best. We are really glad he is able to make the team.
Can anyone who is knowledgeable with HS sports please advice:
1. Do all the players selected for JV get to play in the games this season?
2. Next year as a Junior can he still play JV or his only shot at playing is going to be at varsity level?
3. How difficult is a jump from JV to varsity?
4. Do players take private practice or is it just whatever practice they get at school?
Thanks