Anonymous wrote:My child got a 29 ACT and wouldn’t dream of applying to UMD, but they couldn’t juggle d1 sports, either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a niece and nephew who both attended Northwestern as scholarship athletes. They were excellent students as well. Both would also have attended Michigan over NU if they were recruited by the school. Both would also have been excellent students at Michigan. Northwestern gets better students overall in their sports because most of them weren’t good enough to play for higher rated teams.
Which sports?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and MI. It is not even close.
The next tier would be Texas, ND
Vandy, UVA, USC, Berkeley, Northwestern, Duke, and Stanford disqualified for not being big sport schools. Not even remotely big sport schools.
Sorry. Again, the OP said "rigorous" schools. ND has all of these beat and was in top 10 football rankings. Not second tier by any means.
And your head coach still left for a better opportunity at LSU.
LOL, yes, where players are recruited as long as they can sign their name...no academic requirements. Makes Kelly's job easier.
So not that different.
Umm...OK? Maybe lay off the next glass of wine...it's a work night.
In Kelly’s conversation with Sports Illustrated, Notre Dame’s head coach pegged the average GPA of his incoming freshman class at 2.8 with a score of 24 on the ACT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a niece and nephew who both attended Northwestern as scholarship athletes. They were excellent students as well. Both would also have attended Michigan over NU if they were recruited by the school. Both would also have been excellent students at Michigan. Northwestern gets better students overall in their sports because most of them weren’t good enough to play for higher rated teams.
Which sports?
Anonymous wrote:I have a niece and nephew who both attended Northwestern as scholarship athletes. They were excellent students as well. Both would also have attended Michigan over NU if they were recruited by the school. Both would also have been excellent students at Michigan. Northwestern gets better students overall in their sports because most of them weren’t good enough to play for higher rated teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and MI. It is not even close.
The next tier would be Texas, ND
Vandy, UVA, USC, Berkeley, Northwestern, Duke, and Stanford disqualified for not being big sport schools. Not even remotely big sport schools.
Sorry. Again, the OP said "rigorous" schools. ND has all of these beat and was in top 10 football rankings. Not second tier by any means.
And your head coach still left for a better opportunity at LSU.
LOL, yes, where players are recruited as long as they can sign their name...no academic requirements. Makes Kelly's job easier.
So not that different.
Umm...OK? Maybe lay off the next glass of wine...it's a work night.
In Kelly’s conversation with Sports Illustrated, Notre Dame’s head coach pegged the average GPA of his incoming freshman class at 2.8 with a score of 24 on the ACT.
Not accurate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and MI. It is not even close.
The next tier would be Texas, ND
Vandy, UVA, USC, Berkeley, Northwestern, Duke, and Stanford disqualified for not being big sport schools. Not even remotely big sport schools.
Sorry. Again, the OP said "rigorous" schools. ND has all of these beat and was in top 10 football rankings. Not second tier by any means.
And your head coach still left for a better opportunity at LSU.
LOL, yes, where players are recruited as long as they can sign their name...no academic requirements. Makes Kelly's job easier.
So not that different.
Umm...OK? Maybe lay off the next glass of wine...it's a work night.
In Kelly’s conversation with Sports Illustrated, Notre Dame’s head coach pegged the average GPA of his incoming freshman class at 2.8 with a score of 24 on the ACT.
Not accurate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida and MI. It is not even close.
The next tier would be Texas, ND
Vandy, UVA, USC, Berkeley, Northwestern, Duke, and Stanford disqualified for not being big sport schools. Not even remotely big sport schools.
Sorry. Again, the OP said "rigorous" schools. ND has all of these beat and was in top 10 football rankings. Not second tier by any means.
And your head coach still left for a better opportunity at LSU.
LOL, yes, where players are recruited as long as they can sign their name...no academic requirements. Makes Kelly's job easier.
So not that different.
Umm...OK? Maybe lay off the next glass of wine...it's a work night.
In Kelly’s conversation with Sports Illustrated, Notre Dame’s head coach pegged the average GPA of his incoming freshman class at 2.8 with a score of 24 on the ACT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she want to play or just watch?
I’d add Stanford, UNC, look at other state flagships.
State flagships are massive mills—no “rigor” there unless you mean deciding whose going to win beer pong.