Anonymous wrote:Arlington girls list. Check Instagram.
Duquesne
Washington & Lee
Dickinson (2)
Roanoke
William & Mary (3)
Syracuse
Georgetown
Buffalo
George Washington
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
A Letter of Intent is a legally-binding contract which says that you will attend that college for a minimum of 1 academic year in exchange for an athletic scholarship.
You have been fooled into believing it’s for everyone because everyone participates In the ceremony now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
Post a link to the rule
A Letter of Intent is a legally-binding contract which says that you will attend that college for a minimum of 1 academic year in exchange for an athletic scholarship.
You have been fooled into believing it’s for everyone because everyone participates In the ceremony now.
Not true my son signed a letter of intent his sr yr of hs to play at a D1 school $0 in athletic scholarship. Later in yr decommitided to go to a smaller D3 school still no athletic $0. this was in 2015.
This isn’t negotiable - a NLI is only when the school is offering financial aid for athletics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
A Letter of Intent is a legally-binding contract which says that you will attend that college for a minimum of 1 academic year in exchange for an athletic scholarship.
You have been fooled into believing it’s for everyone because everyone participates In the ceremony now.
Not true my son signed a letter of intent his sr yr of hs to play at a D1 school $0 in athletic scholarship. Later in yr decommitided to go to a smaller D3 school still no athletic $0. this was in 2015.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
A Letter of Intent is a legally-binding contract which says that you will attend that college for a minimum of 1 academic year in exchange for an athletic scholarship.
You have been fooled into believing it’s for everyone because everyone participates In the ceremony now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
A Letter of Intent is a legally-binding contract which says that you will attend that college for a minimum of 1 academic year in exchange for an athletic scholarship.
You have been fooled into believing it’s for everyone because everyone participates In the ceremony now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
That is absolutely NOT TRUE. Signing the letter of intent does not require any Athletic Scholarship be given. It simply means they have been accepted into the school with the intent on playing for the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not with any of these top clubs but based on what I’ve seen on social media, FCV placed girls in more top tier schools. They get a lot hate but they definitely are doing something right regardless of what league they play in.
FCV has several players committed to Virginia Tech.
Anonymous wrote:Where are commits from BSC, VA Union, BRYC, Arlington and Loudoun?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Remember signing a letter of intent is not a scholarship. Its simply saying you are intending to play there. No mention of athletic scholarship unless announced at the same time.
This is incorrect. You do not sign a letter of intent unless you are receiving an athletic scholarship. It is a legally binding contract providing that the athlete is committing to play their sport at the college for at least one year in return for an athletic scholarship. It is true that the scholarship agreement documents are separate, and those are what show the scholarship amount. You can commit to a school without receiving money, and some kids D1 or D2 committed kids who are receiving no scholarships, as well as some D3 athletes, participate in commitment ceremonies made to look like the real D1 National letter of intent signing ceremony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone asked about Arlington. Their site apparently doesn’t post the girls that signed to play college (but does show the boys) and still shows that Arlington plays in the GA. Clearly Arlington is more focused on the males, at least the web site admin is. It always amazes me that a consumer-focused business lets its website be so poor. Once a month take 30 minutes to review the content and update the outdated crap. Sheesh.
NP here. If anyone does know about Arlington I would love to know. A neighbor's daughter plays for them, she's so good, and I know they were hoping she would sign with a school, but I am too chicken to ask in case it didn't work out. If it did work out I would love to send them flowers and maybe some school swag. She's such a good kid.
Check Twitter for announcements from the College soccer team or teams if you know where she was looking. They typically release a blurb about their incoming recruiting class. Some high schools do this for recruited students as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Someone asked about Arlington. Their site apparently doesn’t post the girls that signed to play college (but does show the boys) and still shows that Arlington plays in the GA. Clearly Arlington is more focused on the males, at least the web site admin is. It always amazes me that a consumer-focused business lets its website be so poor. Once a month take 30 minutes to review the content and update the outdated crap. Sheesh.
NP here. If anyone does know about Arlington I would love to know. A neighbor's daughter plays for them, she's so good, and I know they were hoping she would sign with a school, but I am too chicken to ask in case it didn't work out. If it did work out I would love to send them flowers and maybe some school swag. She's such a good kid.