Anonymous wrote:I will try to give you an answer that accounts for all the nuances...with my kid a recruited baseball player:
1. Any baseball player that has the potential to play for a Power 4 team will play for a Power 4 team. If you have a 4.0 and a 1600, you have options like Stanford, Duke, Vanderbilt, UCB, UCLA, UNC, UVA. Schools that will give you everything you want from an athletic or academic standpoint. It would be odd for say UNC to heavily recruit you athletically, yet for Duke to have no interest at all.
Would you perhaps pick University of Tennessee over Stanford? Maybe...if you are in the top 1% of the top 1% and believe you have a great chance of going high in the MLB draft. However, that group is also getting drafted direct out of HS...so maybe you are in the top 3% - 10% of the top 1%.
2. Once it's clear that a Power 4 school isn't in the cards, you think a little more clear-eyed about college. This is where Ivy schools take on outsized importance. They are still D1, but with the added benefit of having a great name on your resume and ideally a team and alumni network that will help you professionally. As an example...would you really play at Fordham or Farleigh Dickinson (two non-Power 4 D1s that popped into my head) just for a couple of $$$s vs. play at Harvard or Princeton? Probably not...may be different if either of those schools gives you a significant scholarship.
You may think it is silly, but a huge draw for basketball and baseball at an Ivy is you do get to compete for the National Championship and it's an automatic berth. Sure, the likelihood of winning is remote...but UPenn did almost win its Super Regional 2 years ago (they were the undefeated team going into to the championship)...they were one win away from going to Omaha for the College World Series.
Football is very different from the other sports because you will never play for a National Championship at the Ivy schools. It is rare and will become extinct that a Power 4 prospect will ever play for an Ivy in football mainly because of NIL $$$s. Also true in basketball these days...4 of the 5 kids that made last year's All Ivy basketball team transferred to other schools for NIL $$$s.
Outside of the revenue sports, the other draw of the Ivy schools is that their teams often are Nationally ranked. UPenn's soccer team is ranked #12 in the country...Harvard/Yale/Cornell hocket teams are usually ranked...usually multiple Ivy league teams are ranked in the Top 20 for LAX, crew, etc.
This is a really great explanation, especially #2.
I have a swimmer, and will add, the Ivy swim teams are generally strong. Some (many?) kids who are Ivy-level students and really great swimmers, will pick Ivy over Power 4. The whole team won't make NCAAs, but individuals will, and that happens for plenty of P4 teams as well.