Anonymous wrote:
3. Things are changing daily right now with all the new rules. We are being told more changes are coming.
4. The extras that athletes get are pretty great- tutoring, academic support, someone doing class registration and making sure graduation requirements are being met, weekly medical/massage/pysch appointment, etc...
6. Coaches are not sugar coating the work and commitment required which has been nice. It is a full time job.
Anonymous wrote:We didn't know much about how athletic recruiting works so wanted to share my list of things I have learned 3 months into recruiting (some of these might be already known but I feel like I read a lot before this started and these things have surprised me):
1. Good question to ask school is if they automatically redshirt freshman. The answers vary from always to depends on the student. This can be negotiable if it is important to your kid.
2. Offers are negotiable. We haven't done it yet but learning that if one school offers 80% coverage of everything- you can go back to the 75% offer and ask for more and let them know who offered more. You might lose but you might get more money.
3. Things are changing daily right now with all the new rules. We are being told more changes are coming.
4. The extras that athletes get are pretty great- tutoring, academic support, someone doing class registration and making sure graduation requirements are being met, weekly medical/massage/pysch appointment, etc...
5. Assistant coaches change schools a lot- always communicate even if not interested because you don't know where that coach may end up. We have already experienced an assistant coach moving from one big school to another and the good contact with their original school is helping with the new school.
6. Coaches are not sugar coating the work and commitment required which has been nice. It is a full time job.
7. I have been surprised that some coaches will say "you can't major in that and be an athlete."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is a d1 engineering major at an acc school. Roommate is pre med.
Lots of perks including laundry, special dining hall, first dibs at class and housing picks. Mental and physical health support.
The only time we have heard of major restrictions was from football players.
Yes. DC is D1 non-revenue at a Big-10. A number team members are getting their degrees in pre-med, biology chemistry, engineering.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is a d1 engineering major at an acc school. Roommate is pre med.
Lots of perks including laundry, special dining hall, first dibs at class and housing picks. Mental and physical health support.
The only time we have heard of major restrictions was from football players.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These are all good points, but they're all impacted by both sport and school, especially since money is not relevant to all schools (Ivys, D3 theoretically). The issue with major is also impacted significantly by school. The Ivys and the like do not put restrictions on major, and in fact, have more restrictions on when/how much athletes can practice.
Ivys might not put restrictions on majors and they supposedly limit time in practice, but we have found that there are other team requirements such as “team lifts” and in-season “captains practices” that are not exactly “optional”. If you don’t participate in these, good luck getting any playing time.
Parents and student athletes should not only ask coaches, but ask the players what their in-season schedule is like. 4hrs a day in-season and juggling a STEM major might not be ideal for some students who thought that Ivys would be less practice time than top athletic D1 programs. YMMV depending on the sport. This is what we have found based on teammates going to Ivy for sport.
Anonymous wrote:There are some very selective schools with big D1 programs- Chapel Hill, UVA, Michigan, Texas, Stanford, UCLA, etc....
Anonymous wrote:These are all good points, but they're all impacted by both sport and school, especially since money is not relevant to all schools (Ivys, D3 theoretically). The issue with major is also impacted significantly by school. The Ivys and the like do not put restrictions on major, and in fact, have more restrictions on when/how much athletes can practice.
Anonymous wrote:We didn't know much about how athletic recruiting works so wanted to share my list of things I have learned 3 months into recruiting (some of these might be already known but I feel like I read a lot before this started and these things have surprised me):
1. Good question to ask school is if they automatically redshirt freshman. The answers vary from always to depends on the student. This can be negotiable if it is important to your kid.
2. Offers are negotiable. We haven't done it yet but learning that if one school offers 80% coverage of everything- you can go back to the 75% offer and ask for more and let them know who offered more. You might lose but you might get more money.
3. Things are changing daily right now with all the new rules. We are being told more changes are coming.
4. The extras that athletes get are pretty great- tutoring, academic support, someone doing class registration and making sure graduation requirements are being met, weekly medical/massage/pysch appointment, etc...
5. Assistant coaches change schools a lot- always communicate even if not interested because you don't know where that coach may end up. We have already experienced an assistant coach moving from one big school to another and the good contact with their original school is helping with the new school.
6. Coaches are not sugar coating the work and commitment required which has been nice. It is a full time job.
7. I have been surprised that some coaches will say "you can't major in that and be an athlete."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sport is track and field. So it is straightforward in the sense that it is about times/distance.
Thank you for sharing.
Do T&F athletes train throughout the entire school year or do they have down time during which they can take a more intense course-load ?