Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You just never know until ED decisions come out for D3. Look at what Wesleyan did a couple of years ago to some of the athletes.
Wait what did Wes do a few yrs back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son committed to his D1 school in February of his junior year. We asked the coach if he was guaranteed admission. The one word answer was “yes.” Our son went through the motions and filled out the application. He was admitted.
Did he say yes, before he saw his transcript?
He sent them his grades. They weren’t worried. They had his PSAT as well. They had 10+ conversations on Zoom. There were no mysteries.
Yea coaches can scan grades and know if it will go through admissions.
I'd like to point out to people who think "athletes have it easier"... this student (as an example) had 10+ interviews with the coaches over Zoom (and most student do this with multiple coaches), in addition to performing in front of them, creating highlight tapes (usually), sending emails, getting rejections, traveling distances to be at tournaments the coaches attend, etc.
So it's nice to know early but it's not "easier".
I mean...it's a different kind of harder and easier. Getting the coach to want to commit to you was harder, but the actual application and admittance was far easier than a typical applicant.
It's also a different story again for strong athletes in football, basketball, baseball and softball. If you go look at an AAU team like Team Durant, every single kid on the 17U team has 10+ D1 offers. It's one of the top AAU teams in the country, so it's no surprise.
Anonymous wrote:You just never know until ED decisions come out for D3. Look at what Wesleyan did a couple of years ago to some of the athletes.
Anonymous wrote:You just never know until ED decisions come out for D3. Look at what Wesleyan did a couple of years ago to some of the athletes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son committed to his D1 school in February of his junior year. We asked the coach if he was guaranteed admission. The one word answer was “yes.” Our son went through the motions and filled out the application. He was admitted.
Did he say yes, before he saw his transcript?
He sent them his grades. They weren’t worried. They had his PSAT as well. They had 10+ conversations on Zoom. There were no mysteries.
Yea coaches can scan grades and know if it will go through admissions.
I'd like to point out to people who think "athletes have it easier"... this student (as an example) had 10+ interviews with the coaches over Zoom (and most student do this with multiple coaches), in addition to performing in front of them, creating highlight tapes (usually), sending emails, getting rejections, traveling distances to be at tournaments the coaches attend, etc.
So it's nice to know early but it's not "easier".
Anonymous wrote:I saw a cople of college announcements coming in already at my kids HS. So far they are only athletic recruits. Does that mean they got their positive decision before writing any essays or filling out a common app? I thought recruited athletes still had to fill out an app and apply ED even with a verbal that the coach was going to support their app.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son committed to his D1 school in February of his junior year. We asked the coach if he was guaranteed admission. The one word answer was “yes.” Our son went through the motions and filled out the application. He was admitted.
Did he say yes, before he saw his transcript?
He sent them his grades. They weren’t worried. They had his PSAT as well. They had 10+ conversations on Zoom. There were no mysteries.
Yea coaches can scan grades and know if it will go through admissions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son committed to his D1 school in February of his junior year. We asked the coach if he was guaranteed admission. The one word answer was “yes.” Our son went through the motions and filled out the application. He was admitted.
Did he say yes, before he saw his transcript?
He sent them his grades. They weren’t worried. They had his PSAT as well. They had 10+ conversations on Zoom. There were no mysteries.
Anonymous wrote:D1 P4 Olympic sport recruit - My kid (junior) got an offer and made her verbal commitment only after she submitted her transcript and SAT scores to the admissions office and the coach got academic approval to recruit her. The minimum SAT score for recruiting was 1400.
She still has to apply ED in the fall of her senior year and get accepted through normal channels; there is a preference for recruited athletes, but not as much as you might think. This process apparently varies from school to school. We understand that Northwestern, for example, has a separate, earlier application process for recruited athletes.
I think kids are posting their verbal commitments on social media, which strikes me as a little precarious. In my daughter's sport, no one does this, and everyone is very cagey about where they have committed until acceptances are in hand senior year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about high academic D3's? Do coaches know in advance?
Basically, everyone knows in advance - but it can be unwise to go fully public (like posting on a high school college commitment site) because things can happen. Only at the Likely Letter stage has an admissions officer said "yes." Even then, technically something could happen. But, at that point, the "yes" is based on an actual application. So, athletes are advised to wait until decisions are released, for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about high academic D3's? Do coaches know in advance?
Basically, everyone knows in advance - but it can be unwise to go fully public (like posting on a high school college commitment site) because things can happen. Only at the Likely Letter stage has an admissions officer said "yes." Even then, technically something could happen. But, at that point, the "yes" is based on an actual application. So, athletes are advised to wait until decisions are released, for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our son committed to his D1 school in February of his junior year. We asked the coach if he was guaranteed admission. The one word answer was “yes.” Our son went through the motions and filled out the application. He was admitted.
Did he say yes, before he saw his transcript?
Anonymous wrote:What about high academic D3's? Do coaches know in advance?