Anonymous wrote:It's a blog to me and if you truly believe the world is flat that's okay too.
Playing college sports are fine for some, but for most they are not. They are a drain on a student's precious time in college. It's not just practice and the games, it's also the 12 months they have to spend in the weight room. College is for the purpose of expanding ones mind not their biceps and unfortunately there is an inverse relationship between the two.
If you can play college sports and avoid breaking your cranium, and graduate not thinking the world is flat, then be my guest play college sports to your hearts content.
Anonymous wrote:College is very challenging and athletics are very time consuming.
Consume every bit of knowledge you can while you are there.
Most people cannot afford to take that much time away from the primary reason they are in college - to get a great education.
If you are deeply truly passionate about a sport no one will be able to stop you from playing it, but if your dedication to the sport is anything less than enormous but prudent with your time and concentrate entirely on your academics.
College is very difficult - 50% of those who enter fail to graduate with a Bachelors Degree or higher. Don't risk your GPA or not graduating from college because you spent too many hours in the weight room during your freshman and sophomore years. Imagine the loss and waste one would feel if they played sports in college and that it caused them to never graduate. To have played college sports but to have failed to graduate with a BA would be very humbling. To have played college ball but being unable to put on your resume that you have BA would be very humbling. To have played sports in college but being uncomfortable talking about it because you never graduated would be very humbling.
Go to college, get a great education, get a great job and live a wonderful life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are a drain on a student's precious time in college. It's not just practice and the games, it's also the 12 months they have to spend in the weight room. College is for the purpose of expanding ones mind not their biceps and unfortunately there is an inverse relationship between the two.
Nope. In fact, a strong body strengthens the mind, too. But that aside, if the student is forced to exercise, what that drives out is "time wasters" like socializing, drinking, and partying, not studying. If they're in the weight room, they're not in a bar - and as a parent I'm perfectly happy with that trade-off.
Anonymous wrote:They are a drain on a student's precious time in college. It's not just practice and the games, it's also the 12 months they have to spend in the weight room. College is for the purpose of expanding ones mind not their biceps and unfortunately there is an inverse relationship between the two.
Anonymous wrote:DS played baseball for an Ivy League college. He played because he loved it and college was (he thought) the last time he could play competitively (is playing for the Minors now). Playing baseball did exclude him from the typical semester abroad and he was cautioned against majoring in a lab science. Playing a top sport is like having a job - it is a huge time commitment.
Another thing to consider us the networking with the sport. DS has basically been promised starting positions in various companies owned by baseball alums.
But love of the game is the driving force.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know anyone in law or engineering that played college sports. Also, if one has goals set for mba/law/medicine/phd at a top school, how can one achieve those grades for entrance when time is spent playing sports? Are these college sports players pursuing business?
That takes too narrow a view of sports (and other non-academic activities in college) and of the sort of well-rounded, time-managing, life-balancing person who will succeed in those fields. Lots of people in those fields played sports, but they won't often be talking about their days in collegiate sports, so there is no reason you would know. Nonetheless, about half my friends who are lawyers played sports in college, including my spouse and I. It doesn't matter what level or even if they were great at it, but is does matter that they had the focus and time management skills to do it and still succeed academically.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know anyone in law or engineering that played college sports. Also, if one has goals set for mba/law/medicine/phd at a top school, how can one achieve those grades for entrance when time is spent playing sports? Are these college sports players pursuing business?
Anonymous wrote:This is a blog not the New England Journal of Medicine so research reports are not required.
Players in every sport suffer from concussions except swimmers who suffer from water in their ears and wrinkly finger syndrome.
Anonymous wrote:That said, my brother wasted years of his life trying to make the Olympics in his sport. He spent all of college exclusively focused on that goal. He missed making an alternate for the team by one slot. He did graduate from college after 5 years, but with a crap major and a crap GPA. It's haunted home for years and now in his mid 30s he's still playing catch up. The dream of an Olympic medal was a huge bust for his life, as I'm sure it is for many.