Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Should I be looking at vball camps at Ivy League schools? She is in 8th grade in a large city in the South. 5 feet 5 inches. Setter. Very good hands. Solid player. She does not have a great vertical so would be setter/DS. She plays on a local club team but is not amazing.
I'm guessing we don't need to waste our time going to summer camps at MIT, other East Coast universities, etc? She is a very strong student academically.
The fact I am asking this on a public forum means that she's not a recruit for college, right?
Your only chance is to pay for a skills coach, a strength coach, a nutritionist, and a career manager. If you don't start now, your kid won't get recruited to play in college. This is the sad reality.
Anonymous wrote:Should I be looking at vball camps at Ivy League schools? She is in 8th grade in a large city in the South. 5 feet 5 inches. Setter. Very good hands. Solid player. She does not have a great vertical so would be setter/DS. She plays on a local club team but is not amazing.
I'm guessing we don't need to waste our time going to summer camps at MIT, other East Coast universities, etc? She is a very strong student academically.
The fact I am asking this on a public forum means that she's not a recruit for college, right?
Anonymous wrote:There are only two women on the MIT team 5’4” or 5’5”. One went to Deerfield, so has an easier route. I say you have no chance.
Anonymous wrote:You won’t see a college coach watching potential recruits much before 16s year, occasional 15s but mostly 16s. Let your DD develop as she matures and ask the question again in a few years. The main thing is love of the sport - there’s enough hard graft ahead of her if she goes down the college route as it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know if both of her parents were college athletes or otherwise highly accomplished athletes.
My kid is a D1 athlete and DH and I were both mediocre athletes in youth/high school sports and definitely could never have played in college. Yes, a lot of it is hereditary, but my kid is an amazing athlete, against the odds.
Truly doubt that
Why? Maybe they each had half of what it took to be an amazing athlete (e.g. one parent had incredible hand-eye coordination and general athleticism but their dedication and mental game sucked, the other was super dedicated and had tons of grit but couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn) and their genes combined just right for their kid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know if both of her parents were college athletes or otherwise highly accomplished athletes.
My kid is a D1 athlete and DH and I were both mediocre athletes in youth/high school sports and definitely could never have played in college. Yes, a lot of it is hereditary, but my kid is an amazing athlete, against the odds.
Truly doubt that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most but not all 8th grade girls are done growing. If that’s your daughter she is too short to be a serious recruit. But that doesn’t mean she can’t play in high school and love it. Volleyball will be one of the ten activities in her common core app and demonstrate that she has commitment and perseverance, and show that she is well rounded.
not true- my DD grew from 5'8" in 8th grade to 6'0 over the summer/first part of 9th grade.
But, for the love of God I wish people on this site knew how to comprehend basic words.
“ Most but not all 8th grade girls are done growing.”
Do you understand what “most but not all means”? Of course you don’t, because if you did you wouldn’t have responded with “not true”.
This type of asinine stupidity is mind-boggling.
NP- wish there was a way condescending, a$holes could filter themselves. But here we are. I'm sorry you feel like you need to be so freaking mean for absolutley no reason.