Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My daughter was recruitable at several top LACs but decided to ED to another school based on her broader interests. She was top 10 percent in her graduating class, high rigor, 1590 SAT, NMSF, strong ECs (besides sport). No regrets: got accepted and will play club.
Same. Academics allowed for an ivy, but sport ability was not at an ivy level for recruiting. Chose the former via ED and heading to an ivy.
Same exact here. DD went to Ivy, captained the club team which included qualifying for 3 national championship tournaments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My daughter was recruitable at several top LACs but decided to ED to another school based on her broader interests. She was top 10 percent in her graduating class, high rigor, 1590 SAT, NMSF, strong ECs (besides sport). No regrets: got accepted and will play club.
Same. Academics allowed for an ivy, but sport ability was not at an ivy level for recruiting. Chose the former via ED and heading to an ivy.
Same exact here. DD went to Ivy, captained the club team which included qualifying for 3 national championship tournaments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most top athletes do not end up selecting lower tiered schools. Either they play at Ivys, or Hopkins, Chicago, military academies, or they play at Duke, Wake, W&M, UVA, Michigan etc.
Most top athletes are committing to top tier schools.
If the athlete is a nonstarter at club.. that's when this decision level comes in.
This person is talking out of their ass.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most top athletes do not end up selecting lower tiered schools. Either they play at Ivys, or Hopkins, Chicago, military academies, or they play at Duke, Wake, W&M, UVA, Michigan etc.
Most top athletes are committing to top tier schools.
If the athlete is a nonstarter at club.. that's when this decision level comes in.
This person is talking out of their ass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. My daughter was recruitable at several top LACs but decided to ED to another school based on her broader interests. She was top 10 percent in her graduating class, high rigor, 1590 SAT, NMSF, strong ECs (besides sport). No regrets: got accepted and will play club.
Same. Academics allowed for an ivy, but sport ability was not at an ivy level for recruiting. Chose the former via ED and heading to an ivy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Learning a lot about recruiting and college process. Did anyone's child decide not to play based on where they were recruited? My kid is extremely bright and not sure the stars will align, especially having to commit before all acceptances come through.
I know several. Usually athletes with strong academics that get into a top college but did not get recruited to play at that institution. It is fine. It is a little tricky when they see all the teammates committing to play in college but once they get past that, all is well and they play club or move on to other things in college.
Anonymous wrote:My kid and many of her friends at UVA made the same decision. Is the grind really worth it, if they end up a lower academic universities just to play their sport?
Anonymous wrote:I think there is definitely kids who could play at a D3 or lower tier D1 who choose to go to a "better" school (could be better fit, better academics, better major, whatever) and not do the sport.
In my DD's friend group- there is only one athlete who has an opportunity to go to a top school for athletics and academics. The rest is kind of a mix of being able to play club at Virginia Tech vs playing at College of Wooster (nothing against Wooster but the kid would prefer VT)
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid with top athletics and top academics. He's not a senior, so still in the process, and we anticipate that the decision will be difficult to make.
Recruitment might not get him his first choice school. Also, at some schools the time commitment of sports can make the major he wants, and things like extracurriculars and internships really hard or impossible.
So, he's not at all sure he'll end up taking an offer.