Anonymous wrote:I know a kid who did this for baseball. Restating what someone said above - you retain your 4 years of college eligibility.
But you have to ask yourself, if I wasn't recruited out of HS, how likely am I to be now? If you're not recruited to a top D1 program, smarter move *usually* is to try to be recruited D3. Worse case, you have a great 4 years, a great education, at a known school.
Anonymous wrote:I have never heard this being popular for track
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If community colleges now offer 4 year degrees and sports how are they not just college?
They offer associates degrees, not bachelors degrees. Many students transfer to a four year school to finish. And yes, they are just college. College is college, and people are getting educations in different ways that fit their needs. There are lots of paths, and that is a very good thing.
Anonymous wrote:If community colleges now offer 4 year degrees and sports how are they not just college?
Anonymous wrote:"Last Chance U" is a documentary show on Netflix that explores this world. The path is becoming more appealing because a judge ruled that juco might not count against NCAA years of eligibility.
Anonymous wrote:It is very common in baseball. It is an affordable way to start your education, and then you transfer to a four year university for your bachelor’s. Some of those guys think they could make the majors - I mean, they are 18 year olds obsessed with a dream - but most know they won’t.
Anonymous wrote:Family friends son has a full ride to community college to play a sport. He lives in South, community college is in Midwest.
I was unaware that community college had sports scholarships and recruited athletes. Is this a feeder to a larger college perhaps? Do the schools expect them to go pro, so education at associates level is sufficient?