Anonymous wrote:Are club sports with competitive tryouts the same as intramural sports? Even at large universities that have both?
Anonymous wrote:Why pay extra when they can play at just about any university's intramural team and get the same social-emotional benefits?Anonymous wrote:I have a teenager. So far my teenager shows no interest in doing physical activity outside of sports. My teenager is a middling player. Good enough to play in HS, but we have no expectations of DC being a high level college athlete. When DC has been unable to play due to illness or injury, it has been horrible for DC and us. DC loves playing, and DC needs the physical outlet. Will we pay some extra for DC to keep playing in college? Absolutely. Healthy mind, healthy body. It won't be for prestige or bragging rights or anything except understanding how important athletics are to our particular child and wanting to support DC. If DC figures out how to get enjoyment from physical activity that's not sports-team-related, that's great too. But just as we might pay extra so our DC could go to a college with a great arts opportunities, we're willing to pay extra so our DC can continue playing sports at a level DC enjoys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Almost nobody at the no name D3's as you call them is paying full cost. They may not give sports scholarships, but they give plenty of "merit" money.
Okay, so instead of $30K-65K you're talking $20K-55K ... so your child can pretend to be an accomplished athlete?
Why pay extra when they can play at just about any university's intramural team and get the same social-emotional benefits?Anonymous wrote:I have a teenager. So far my teenager shows no interest in doing physical activity outside of sports. My teenager is a middling player. Good enough to play in HS, but we have no expectations of DC being a high level college athlete. When DC has been unable to play due to illness or injury, it has been horrible for DC and us. DC loves playing, and DC needs the physical outlet. Will we pay some extra for DC to keep playing in college? Absolutely. Healthy mind, healthy body. It won't be for prestige or bragging rights or anything except understanding how important athletics are to our particular child and wanting to support DC. If DC figures out how to get enjoyment from physical activity that's not sports-team-related, that's great too. But just as we might pay extra so our DC could go to a college with a great arts opportunities, we're willing to pay extra so our DC can continue playing sports at a level DC enjoys.
Rich parents have rich kids. More news at 11.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What happens after the 4 yrs of college? At some point, the sports stop. Or they end up playing for the local adult rec league which seems to the same as intramurals. Sports maybe a part of who they are and what makes them happy, but for most kids, sports have to end sometime.
I've seen three outcomes: a) they get real fat; b) become crossfit drones; or c) drop out of college and enlist in military.
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2016/02/17/athletes-are-more-likely-be-find-employment-be-engaged-work-study-suggests
Is your child passionate about the sport in general or passionate about playing on the school team, specifically?Anonymous wrote:Clearly you do not have a child with a passion for a sport. It's absolutely part of who they are and what makes them happy. My kid is at a NESCAC school happily playing her sport on their D3 team. Had she gone Ivy or another big D1 she would only be on their club team, and it was important to her to play on the school team. There are many great reasons to go D3. My kid is happy and playing the sport she loves. And her school is great, just not a "top school".
Anonymous wrote:Interesting! Is it possible to develop at that rate in lacrosse? Better question for lax thread, I know.Anonymous wrote:I've seen kids go from a DIII hopeful prospect at sophomore year to a DI prospect by senior year. And I've seen plenty of them pick DIII over DI just because of the school.
This is baseball, by the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen kids go from a DIII hopeful prospect at sophomore year to a DI prospect by senior year. And I've seen plenty of them pick DIII over DI just because of the school.
This is baseball, by the way.
Juco and D2 ball is littered with dudes with pro tools that are rare to find in d3
Hungry dudes also - have that dawg in ‘em