Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d remind him college is about getting an education and a job. At some point he needs to give up whatever soccer dream is striving for because it’s very unlikely to end with a job.
It’s a tough pill to swallow but one every athlete must take at some point.
His focus should be on his academics, even if that means he stays at his current school and just plays club ball.
Unless his connected soccer teammate hooks him up with a sweet gig
The same can be said for his roommate/professor/neighbor/relative…..
Sports in college should only be viewed as a way to get your foot in the door of admissions. After that, unless you’re at the level of professional drafting, academics come first.
Teammates bonding through sports is different
No, it isn't.
Says the person who obviously didn't play team sports or was an outsider on the team
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d remind him college is about getting an education and a job. At some point he needs to give up whatever soccer dream is striving for because it’s very unlikely to end with a job.
It’s a tough pill to swallow but one every athlete must take at some point.
His focus should be on his academics, even if that means he stays at his current school and just plays club ball.
Unless his connected soccer teammate hooks him up with a sweet gig
The same can be said for his roommate/professor/neighbor/relative…..
Sports in college should only be viewed as a way to get your foot in the door of admissions. After that, unless you’re at the level of professional drafting, academics come first.
Teammates bonding through sports is different
No, it isn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d remind him college is about getting an education and a job. At some point he needs to give up whatever soccer dream is striving for because it’s very unlikely to end with a job.
It’s a tough pill to swallow but one every athlete must take at some point.
His focus should be on his academics, even if that means he stays at his current school and just plays club ball.
Unless his connected soccer teammate hooks him up with a sweet gig
The same can be said for his roommate/professor/neighbor/relative…..
Sports in college should only be viewed as a way to get your foot in the door of admissions. After that, unless you’re at the level of professional drafting, academics come first.
Teammates bonding through sports is different
Anonymous wrote:If he gets cut and wants to play he goes to the portal. Depending on level of DI he Will likely have to accept being picked up by DII or going DIII
Anonymous wrote:Accept that soccer is now a fun hobby and turn his attention to other parts of his life while playing for fun.
If soccer is the only thing in his life, I guess he could try to transfer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Club. If he gets cut, it was VERY unlikely that he was going to play beyond college.
My kid does club at a D1. About 50% were varsity players. The varsity coach is not well liked. They win everything. Club has a lot of travel too and holds nationals- but my son is bummed the competition is not competitive enough.
He put himself in the transfer portal - but the kid is at a top T10-15 so we aren’t letting him transfer to these T200+ just for a few years of D1-D3.
He’s found lots of other opportunities to keep playing at a high level. Lots of semi pro- u23, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Jaded group. Playing soccer and being part of sports teams in HS is fun. Clubs are a hassle with all the homework. Swap him to another school if he want. Let him be a kid and play.
Anonymous wrote:Hard to say:
Option 1) stick around and try to stay on the practice squad in hopes of them bringing you back next year
Option 2) transfer portal in hopes of playing somewhere else
Option 3) switch to campus club soccer, accept the fact that competitive soccer is over
Option 4) tryouts for the closest semi-pro team while finishing your degree
There are no bad choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He plays on the school's club team, most likely.
I often wonder if crazy soccer parents (not necessarily saying you're one of them, OP) realize that after high school, and for a select few after college, soccer does go away. Sure you can play in adult leagues but like... transferring schools to play on a different lower division soccer team? Is college just the next step in soccer achievement? What about after college?
Like, the obsession with getting into an Ivy I also think is kind of tiring (because it's like... ok, you're at princeton, now what? you keep attending class and then graduate and get a job like everyone else) but I understand it more, because of the link to higher paying jobs and a stronger education and a more intelligent peer group while in college. But... chasing soccer at age 20, as someone who is getting cut from their D1 team? The glory days are over, kid. You were probably a standout at age 10, and that's great that you enjoyed soccer through your youth, but like... competitive soccer is over for you. Hope you didn't pour your entire identity into it over the past decade. But for some of these parents and kids, they absolutely did.
I was with you until this analogy. [b]Sorry but on average the kids at Princeton are moving on to a whole other life than the kids at JMU. [//b]You realize that right? Just reality.
Do agree with you though sports end and that's it until they can have their own children and live vicariously through them, which is the next step for many.
NP
But do YOU realize that on average the kids at Princeton are simply CONTINUING on in their whole other life than the kids at JMU?
Anyone who isn’t already connected upon entering an Ivy is in for a rude awakening when they inevitably learn that the Ivy pedigree is more bragging rights than some golden ticket.
I went to an Ivy and this really isn’t true but go on thinking it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you think your kid is going to do after college?
Seriously stop. It's a hobby not a vocation.
D1 sports is a hobby for who?
What exactly would you classify it as? It’s not an academic or professional activity. It’s a recreational activity done simply for enjoyment. AKA - a hobby.