Anonymous wrote:Remember, the schools are worried about “end game”. The most desirable athletes are the ones who bring attention to the athletic program and will be sought after by top colleges.
Football and basketball are the sports colleges are most likely to be offering sports because they generate the most revenue.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the school size of course, but say for the average private school of 120, how many are recruited each year? What is a high number or a low number for a school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A school like Sidwell will have somewhere between 10-20 in any given year across sports like boys and girls basketball or soccer, football, girls crew, boys and girls tennis, an occasional boys or girls lacrosse, an occasional wrestler (boys or girls) and then some kids will have out of school sports like sailing or fencing.
This.
The recruited athletes are regionally or nationally competitive on their sport’s travel or club or state team. Individual or team. Mainstream or not (squash, fencing, table tennis, speed walking, etc.)
Wash DC isn’t some place with AAAAA big time sports public schools like long beach poly PHS or westlake PHS or highland park PHS. Or privates like Harvard westlake sports programs. They just don’t have total students, athletic budget or top coaching staff to supplant a travel team program’s expertise.
SJC comes closest. Sidwell started recruiting basketball team members around the coaches’ kids. But schools and parents here are academic focused. The athletic minded parents let AAU, ECNL or Team Maryland handle it. And then you might need a more understanding private or public school due to missing Fridays.
Anonymous wrote:There those athletes who are recruited and commit to D1, then those who go through the process to commit to D3. Among the local privates (not the WCAC schools), Bullis probably has the most D1 athletes, then Landon and Prep and I'm sure the number varies from year to year from anything like 3-4 to 10 D1 and then a handful of D3. While schools like Sidwell, St. Albans, NCS, Potomac, and Holton, may have 5 or 6 D3 and 1 to 4 D1. GDS, Maret, Field, Burke, very few college athletes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stone Ridge claimed 17 in 2022, 7 to D1 and 10 to D3. Almost all of those, if not all, were recruits. Class size of around 90.
LOL!! Stone Ridge? What sport? I don’t think they’re actual recruits. I think a lot of them are likely walk-on’s. You can claim that you are doing a sport but that does not mean recruited. Big difference.
Yeah, walk ons at Boston college and Notre dame and then all the swimmers too. That’s exactly how it works, yeah.
Anonymous wrote:According to the Fall and Spring signing days, Bullis had 13 athletes that signed for college. 10 in Fall and 3 in spring. Not 25% of the class.
https://www.bullis.org/athletics/athletics-news/article/~board/bullis/post/fall-2022-signing-day-celebration
https://www.bullis.org/news/article/~board/bullis/post/ncaa-signing-day-april-12-2023#:~:text=NCAA%20Signing%20Day%20%7C%20April%2012,2023%20%7C%20News%20Article%20%2D%20Bullis%20School
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stone Ridge claimed 17 in 2022, 7 to D1 and 10 to D3. Almost all of those, if not all, were recruits. Class size of around 90.
LOL!! Stone Ridge? What sport? I don’t think they’re actual recruits. I think a lot of them are likely walk-on’s. You can claim that you are doing a sport but that does not mean recruited. Big difference.
Anonymous wrote:A school like Sidwell will have somewhere between 10-20 in any given year across sports like boys and girls basketball or soccer, football, girls crew, boys and girls tennis, an occasional boys or girls lacrosse, an occasional wrestler (boys or girls) and then some kids will have out of school sports like sailing or fencing.
Anonymous wrote:Out of 88 senior this year, Holton has 6 D1 recruits and 7 D3 recruits.