Anonymous wrote:You won’t be recruited if you’re only a reasonably strong athlete looking for an easy sport. There are too many natural talents out there. Just like the naturally brainy kids get Ivy Leagues.
Anonymous wrote:lacrosse - all the top male athletes play other sports - most lacrosse players are average athletes
Anonymous wrote:lacrosse - all the top male athletes play other sports - most lacrosse players are average athletes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf
My son is going to play D3 baseball (already committed) but he is injured at the moment. He picked up golf this summer while he heals and loves it and practices obsessively, since he can’t practice baseball. I asked him if his injury doesn’t heal fully would he consider switching to golf in college? He laughed at me and explained the math of how few male golfers can make collegiate teams.
I had no idea!
Anonymous wrote:If you are under 110lbs, learn how to be a crew in sailing (NOT crew, but the second person in a double handed handed boat). A couple of years of high school sailing experience will open a ton of doors. Skippers are a very different story, but often top college crews have never set foot in a boat before college, so to have some experience, and be small and athletic, is a huge advantage.
Anonymous wrote:Golf
Anonymous wrote:When you say that you are recruited to play in college, do you mean scholarships? or just play on the team?
Rowing: No mens scholarships....it isn't a NCAA sport. Womens rowing is easier than most other sports, but there are fewer total teams. Unlike most other sports, there are very few D2 teams. And the best D3 teams are much better than the weakest D1 teams. The strong D1 teams pretty much require rowers to be over 5'8 or 5'9 with 7:45 or better 2K times...even then the majority will not get even partial scholarships. Someone mentioned coxswains for shorter kids, but very few if any coxswains get scholarships. And it doesn't really help to be athletic....it's a leadership, strategy and steering position.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf
Impossibly hard for men. Only 600ish total programs from D1-D3 and each roster is only 10 or so. Only 2 of those 10 graduate year in/year out. Translation: you will need to be in the top 1200-1500 players under 18 years old on earth to play collegiate men's golf. Much easier for girls but easier to pick up lacrosse and play D3 than learn golf if you've never played. It's easier right now to play D1 football than D1 golf, actually.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It seems like Crew. I know a group of girls who did crew at an Ivy and didn't seem like they started before middle school, nor that they were as intense about their sport as other college athletes
As a girl, to be recruited for an Ivy, you need to be very fast on the erg (rowing machine).
And all of the top rowing schools are looking for tall girls. In some cases 5’10 and above.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like Crew. I know a group of girls who did crew at an Ivy and didn't seem like they started before middle school, nor that they were as intense about their sport as other college athletes