Anonymous wrote:Two of my sons teammates won full ride soccer scholarships - one D1 and one D3 program (well masquerading as a D3. They likely would defeat many/most D1s)
It is rare in men’s collegiate soccer to get full ride but not impossible, if you are a true baller. These two were that level.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you mentioned "Transfer Portal." Is your DC a freshman now and will transfer as a sophomore next year? If so, i believe more scholarship funds are generally unlocked after the freshman year. Would that apply in this case, do you think? (The idea is that schools are more likely to offer more incentives to proven players/ students.)
-Thank you, good luck and congrats to your DC!
Anonymous wrote:Speaking from firsthand knowledge, there ARE a lot of full scholarships in women’s soccer. And a lot of P4 schools are adding more money next year as the scholarship caps increase to match the roster limits.
Anonymous wrote:A verbal commitment is non-binding on the part of both parties. An NLI and/or financial aid agreement is the binding agreement but until you sign that, neither party has an obligation to the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How binding is a verbal commitment? My child received a full college soccer scholarship (dorm, tuition, food, etc) for next fall through the transfer portal. Between now and the fall, can the coach rescind the offer? And/or can my child decide to go to another school?
1. Full scholarships in soccer don't exist unless unless your child is the next Messi, in which case he/she wouldn't be going to college. 2. Verbal offers are worth as much as the paper they're printed on.
Anonymous wrote:How binding is a verbal commitment? My child received a full college soccer scholarship (dorm, tuition, food, etc) for next fall through the transfer portal. Between now and the fall, can the coach rescind the offer? And/or can my child decide to go to another school?