Anonymous wrote:Those are good times. They won't impress D1 powers at all but they are good enough to be on the radar of some D1 schools and many D3 academic schools. I would cover all the bases in applications and see what happens. And reach out to coaches at those schools now. Some will say "call me when you get in" others might advocate for you. And keep in mind, if he blows up next track season or as a college freshman, transferring is a standard thing these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hi all - fairly new to this - but seems hs kids are getting faster and faster, my junior has had some exchanges with coaches but not sure where he should be targeting.
His view is he would like to use his running to help get into the best academic school possible. D1 or D3
He was top 20 in state cross country this past fall current track times: 4:16 1600 / 9:15 3200.
Was holding off reaching out to coaches until track season ends.
Is he too slow for ivies? also Davidson, W&M, Bucknell, Lehigh, Vanderbilt (no track - but they do have cross country) and Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin all interest my kiddo. 3.9 unweighted with good rigor - bad test scores lol, may need TO. And hs coach is not great - young nice guy but not experienced with handling recruiting stuff
There have been a lot of changes in NCAA recruiting recently so get up to speed with that.
My kid was recruited by a bunch of D3 schools for track - 800 and 1500. But ultimately chose a D1 school for the academics and did walk on. He's running sub 4:00 1500s and 1:54 800s. He just did his first marathon - for fun - and ran under 3.
And he is nowhere close to being really competitive at the D1 level.
D1 running and D3 running shouldn't even be in same sentence. It is a completely different thing. It's like going from high school county meets to the Olympics. Once you are running against Texas and Oregon, it's a different sport. And Bucknell and Lehigh are not in that space.
I would choose schools based on all-around fit - not track. And when you have that list, reach out to the coaches with the published times and let them know you're interested in running for the team. Then take it from there.
Anonymous wrote:Cross country he needs to try to go sub 16 for the 5k.
Anonymous wrote:hi all - fairly new to this - but seems hs kids are getting faster and faster, my junior has had some exchanges with coaches but not sure where he should be targeting.
His view is he would like to use his running to help get into the best academic school possible. D1 or D3
He was top 20 in state cross country this past fall current track times: 4:16 1600 / 9:15 3200.
Was holding off reaching out to coaches until track season ends.
Is he too slow for ivies? also Davidson, W&M, Bucknell, Lehigh, Vanderbilt (no track - but they do have cross country) and Williams, Amherst, Bowdoin all interest my kiddo. 3.9 unweighted with good rigor - bad test scores lol, may need TO. And hs coach is not great - young nice guy but not experienced with handling recruiting stuff

Anonymous wrote:Tfrrs is also a great site.
Things to ask yourself.
Does he have the grades and sats to get into those schools on his own, without track?
Are you full pay at a private D3? Are you ok to pay the 80k a year some of these top SLACs or privates like Davidson, Williams, CMU and Colgate and others cost?
Does your kid want to go to a smaller school,of less than 3000? That’s about the size of my kid’s high school and he did not.
The “break your leg” test, if he couldn’t run any more would he be happy at that school?
Your sons times are good but, to be really competitive for D1, he needs to be closer to 4:10 or under for the mile, and closer to sub 9:10.
Email the coaches and see what responses you get. Track and other sports have very few roster spots; look at the rosters of the schools you’re interested in and see how many distance runners are seniors. Also pay for mile stat and check what those kids were running as hs juniors.
The good thing about track is, the times are very public. The bad thing is, there aren’t enough spots, especially for men.