Anonymous wrote:Any male soccer player that isn’t in a national radar by sophomore year needs to worry about getting in without soccer because soccer is not a sport that helps boys. Those spots go to kids at professional academies and International players.
Get good grades, test scores and be involved in other things too. Once in- he can try to walk on or play club. Period.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, but he will need good test scores and captian/lessons linked to the sport helps.
boggles my mind that people still make these statements - I guess it’s true for the smaller handful of test required schools, but test optional is real my friends
I personally know 2 coaches - both T25 schools - one a public, one an ivy (non-helmet traditionally “smart kid” sport). Both say test scores are mostly meaningless if they want the kid and grades are good. The Ivy academic index is a thing of the past with regards to the test component. Coaches may ask for test scores as it can only help if they are good - but at worst they are a neutral variable in the process
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. Closer to T30. Yes. Closer to T50, probably not. Also depends on how good your DC is and what the benchmark is for the sport.
Lower standards for football recruits than say tennis players.
The sport is soccer.
Anonymous wrote:No, but he will need good test scores and captian/lessons linked to the sport helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. Closer to T30. Yes. Closer to T50, probably not. Also depends on how good your DC is and what the benchmark is for the sport.
Lower standards for football recruits than say tennis players.
The sport is soccer.
If he actually gets recruited, then all he needs to worry about is SAT and GPA, the coach will take care of the rest. Unfortunately, it is very hard to get recruited to D1 men's soccer. Tons of internationals on the teams. Your son should focus on his grades, playing soccer for enjoyment, and having fun while in high school. The club teams at many D1 schools are very competitive and I would recommend focusing on college first and then playing club
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. Closer to T30. Yes. Closer to T50, probably not. Also depends on how good your DC is and what the benchmark is for the sport.
Lower standards for football recruits than say tennis players.
The sport is soccer.
If he actually gets recruited, then all he needs to worry about is SAT and GPA, the coach will take care of the rest. Unfortunately, it is very hard to get recruited to D1 men's soccer. Tons of internationals on the teams. Your son should focus on his grades, playing soccer for enjoyment, and having fun while in high school. The club teams at many D1 schools are very competitive and I would recommend focusing on college first and then playing club
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. Closer to T30. Yes. Closer to T50, probably not. Also depends on how good your DC is and what the benchmark is for the sport.
Lower standards for football recruits than say tennis players.
The sport is soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school. Closer to T30. Yes. Closer to T50, probably not. Also depends on how good your DC is and what the benchmark is for the sport.
Lower standards for football recruits than say tennis players.
Anonymous wrote:No, but he will need good test scores and captian/lessons linked to the sport helps.