Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do sports take walk ons? Specifically, if you're a male cross country runner with 5k time sub 16 and mile time of 4:30 good enough to walk on?
I might be wrong, this was nearly ten years ago, but I think the cross country had runners who were not on the official team. Know a relative who did not have the stats to make team as a frosh, but was on it by senior year. They ran every day with the team. Perhaps it has changed.
Anonymous wrote:this is the problem with SLACs in general imo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is the problem with SLACs in general imo
It really is. They are far too small to have so many teams. Particularly Williams were roughly 40 percent of all students are recruited athletes. That's a no thank you for most non-athlete boys.
Anonymous wrote:Do sports take walk ons? Specifically, if you're a male cross country runner with 5k time sub 16 and mile time of 4:30 good enough to walk on?
Anonymous wrote:this is the problem with SLACs in general imo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I went to Williams and several of my close friends from college have kids there (lots of legacy admits). Report is that it can be hard for non-athletes/non-outdoorsy kids - social life revolves around teams pretty often. One friend has a musician kid who has been happy - but it does sound like you need to have a passion to find your social group. And for many kids, that is their sport.
What if its a club team? Is that enough socially?
Anonymous wrote:I went to Williams and several of my close friends from college have kids there (lots of legacy admits). Report is that it can be hard for non-athletes/non-outdoorsy kids - social life revolves around teams pretty often. One friend has a musician kid who has been happy - but it does sound like you need to have a passion to find your social group. And for many kids, that is their sport.