Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how 5 in 5 may impact international recruiting for boys. Everyone's been focused on how it will impact US based reclassing for basketball, lacrosse, and football, but I think it will impact D1 schools recruiting semi pro 22 year olds from Europe.
Same here - do the college coaches view the internationals as desirable if they can only play a year or two? Is college as desirable a path for those players if they can't stay long enough to get a degree?
Am very curious how that and the limited free transfers impact HS recruiting, though I guess the proposed changes have to pass first.
DP. I think this is the latest on the 5-in-5: https://www.espn.com/college-sports/story/_/id/48978440/ncaa-panel-tweaks-di-eligibility-proposal-vote-late-june It would start the 5 year eligibility clock from the earlier of an athlete’s 19th birthday or their full-time college enrollment.
The D1 coaches my DS spoke to during the recruiting process this year said they expect the new rule to pass. It will presumably dampen coaches’ interest in the over-age foreign players. But it’s not good for the next few HS recruiting classes, as players currently playing in college may decide to take advantage of their fifth year of eligibility, like many did during the temporary eligibility extensions during COVID. D1 coaches right now don’t know how many open spots they will have for kids currently in HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder how 5 in 5 may impact international recruiting for boys. Everyone's been focused on how it will impact US based reclassing for basketball, lacrosse, and football, but I think it will impact D1 schools recruiting semi pro 22 year olds from Europe.
Same here - do the college coaches view the internationals as desirable if they can only play a year or two? Is college as desirable a path for those players if they can't stay long enough to get a degree?
Am very curious how that and the limited free transfers impact HS recruiting, though I guess the proposed changes have to pass first.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder how 5 in 5 may impact international recruiting for boys. Everyone's been focused on how it will impact US based reclassing for basketball, lacrosse, and football, but I think it will impact D1 schools recruiting semi pro 22 year olds from Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I am hiring leadership talent, and look at comparable candidates that have similar track records, similar educations and seem to be a good cultural fits - same same - except for one was a college athlete and the other was not - I will take the college athlete every time. (spoiler alert: And so will most other leaders of leaders).
The special treatment of college athletes extends well beyond the institutional walls.
Forgot to add, I would not take the marching band, fraternity bro (even if in my fraternity), debate club champ, student paper editor, etc... You even bring that sort of stuff up in a leadership interview or on your CV, and I'm labeling you a weirdo.
Anonymous wrote:When I am hiring leadership talent, and look at comparable candidates that have similar track records, similar educations and seem to be a good cultural fits - same same - except for one was a college athlete and the other was not - I will take the college athlete every time. (spoiler alert: And so will most other leaders of leaders).
The special treatment of college athletes extends well beyond the institutional walls.
Anonymous wrote:Why does nobody talk about D2 here? A full ride athletic scholarship is rare, but you can combine a partial athletic with a partial academic scholarship. I did that, although it was 30 yrs ago. It doesn’t seem like much has changed. Or there are at least some state schools with lower tuition to make partial athletic scholarship work.
Anonymous wrote:Why does nobody talk about D2 here? A full ride athletic scholarship is rare, but you can combine a partial athletic with a partial academic scholarship. I did that, although it was 30 yrs ago. It doesn’t seem like much has changed. Or there are at least some state schools with lower tuition to make partial athletic scholarship work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I am hiring leadership talent, and look at comparable candidates that have similar track records, similar educations and seem to be a good cultural fits - same same - except for one was a college athlete and the other was not - I will take the college athlete every time. (spoiler alert: And so will most other leaders of leaders).
The special treatment of college athletes extends well beyond the institutional walls.
Forgot to add, I would not take the marching band, fraternity bro (even if in my fraternity), debate club champ, student paper editor, etc... You even bring that sort of stuff up in a leadership interview or on your CV, and I'm labeling you a weirdo.
And this is why American businesses are fixated on doing away with regulation and focusing on the short term, necessitating a government bailout a couple of times per generation.
All our problems would be solved if we had more flautists. Lizzo for president!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you play in a revenue generating sport which means football or basketball, college sports are just another enjoyable activity to pursue. Think marching band, fraternities, engineering competitions, and the like. All power to you if that’s what you enjoy and it’s great that our colleges offer all these activities to enrich the experience. College soccer is no more no less. I hope people aren’t delusional about college sports.
:roll:
Come back when recruited athletes no longer get a special admissions process and are in the same bucket as students in marching band.
Athletes recruited for soccer don’t often get a led up in admissions. It’s different for revenue generating sports like basketball and football. DS was advised to maintain the highest GPA possible if he wanted to be recruited. Sure there may be an occasional applicant who a coach fights for but it’s isn’t going to be the majority of recruits. A 3.5 isn’t going to get admitted to HYSP on the men’s side. The coaches have their choice of talented HS soccer recruits who check the admissions boxes. But the fact is college soccer coaches are much more likely to choose a transfer or international player in 2026.
Athletes recruited for soccer absolutely get a leg-up in admissions, and it’s very odd to claim otherwise. My child who was recruited by several ivies was told he could get through admissions so long as he kept his grades up and got at least a 1250 on the SAT. My other child (not recruited) with perfect grades in highly rigorous classes and a 1600 on the SAT was shut out by those same schools.
Also, check the rosters for HYPSM. The vast majority of players are American.
I’m not saying it’s an easy path to get to any top school, but we have found that the shot at a golden admissions ticket tends to keep kids more focused on their academics than they might otherwise be.
The HYP players or "IVY" players get no scholarship $.