Anonymous wrote:Tennis is probably the hardest sport to make the roster in college. Golf is probably right behind tennis in terms of difficulty making the roster.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Coxswain for the shorties
Daughter was a coxswain at Princeton - 5 foot 1 - 2400 on the SAT’s and 11 5 scores on the AP exams - even then I think crew helped her with admission - she was a great coxswain with super competitive awareness
Anonymous wrote: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.
Coxswain for the shorties
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tennis is probably the hardest sport to make the roster in college. Golf is probably right behind tennis in terms of difficulty making the roster.
This. small roster size plus 4.5 scholarships plus competing against the world
Both tennis and golf have a maximum of 4.5 scholarships. One thing that most people don't realize is that the majority of tennis/golf players come from wealthy families, so that 4.5 scholarships mean nothing to them. They just happily play at Ivies on full-pay because Ivies don't give out athletic scholarships, if I recall correctly.
Anonymous wrote:Squash
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tennis is probably the hardest sport to make the roster in college. Golf is probably right behind tennis in terms of difficulty making the roster.
This. small roster size plus 4.5 scholarships plus competing against the world
Both tennis and golf have a maximum of 4.5 scholarships. One thing that most people don't realize is that the majority of tennis/golf players come from wealthy families, so that 4.5 scholarships mean nothing to them. They just happily play at Ivies on full-pay because Ivies don't give out athletic scholarships, if I recall correctly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Sailing is not an official NCAA sport. The Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) is the governing authority for sailing competition at colleges and universities throughout the United States and does not allow competitors to receive scholarships or financial aid based on sailing ability
PP - I'm a former college sailor and I am well aware. However, much like men's rowing, they will find a way to give you extra money if you are coming there to sail (for example I received a "special talent" scholarship from one college for playing the violin, I had no intention of playing it in college). Moreso though it can give a boost at highly selective colleges and universities where the sailing coach does get to submit a list for consideration in admissions.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Sailing is not an official NCAA sport. The Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association (ICSA) is the governing authority for sailing competition at colleges and universities throughout the United States and does not allow competitors to receive scholarships or financial aid based on sailing ability
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tennis is probably the hardest sport to make the roster in college. Golf is probably right behind tennis in terms of difficulty making the roster.
This. small roster size plus 4.5 scholarships plus competing against the world
Anonymous wrote:https://scholarshipstats.com/
Crew based on this.
Anonymous wrote:Tennis is probably the hardest sport to make the roster in college. Golf is probably right behind tennis in terms of difficulty making the roster.
Anonymous wrote:Golf
Anonymous wrote:For men, the hardest D1 sport to be recruited for is basketball. The level of competition is insane. Plus you really need to be above 6'4 at least.
Easiest, if you have the height, is crew. Some discipline and basic athleticism will get you on a boat if you are tall.
I don't know about girls. I'd think a tall strong girl with some discipline would get on crew pretty easily.