Anonymous wrote:How many URM at Harvard probably didn’t evfn get a 1300
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This kid was kicked off the UVA team for violating rules. I know him well and was furious the foreign-born players were waxing the floor with him at UVA
So he left a good school, UVA, to attend a better school, UChicago. What not to like?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This kid was kicked off the UVA team for violating rules. I know him well and was furious the foreign-born players were waxing the floor with him at UVA
So he left a good school, UVA, to attend a better school, UChicago. What not to like?
Moving from the highest-ranked tennis team as of last year to a lowly D3. The competition is miles apart
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are the "numbers" that recruited athletes need to hit on the academic scorecard to get in to the Ivy+ schools?
At least 25th percentile? 50th?
Somewhere 1300 and 1400, for the kids I know. Non revenue sports.
That would put them at probably the 5th percentile at a place like Harvard lol
25th percentile is a 1460.
1300-1400 feels really low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This kid was kicked off the UVA team for violating rules. I know him well and was furious the foreign-born players were waxing the floor with him at UVA
So he left a good school, UVA, to attend a better school, UChicago. What not to like?
Anonymous wrote:OP is an idiot. The guy - and he’s a tool alright - makes perfectly clear that it wasn’t a situation where he applied to Yale, Penn and UVA in high school but his SAT score was only high enough for UVA. He also never said he got a 1200; he said a 1200 was the lowest score that UVA would allow.
The guy flamed out at UVA, had a reputation for being an a$$hole, and coaches talk. THAT’S why he couldn’t transfer to the Ivy League.
Anonymous wrote:This kid was kicked off the UVA team for violating rules. I know him well and was furious the foreign-born players were waxing the floor with him at UVA
Anonymous wrote:My DS got in MIT athletic recruit with a 1510
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are the "numbers" that recruited athletes need to hit on the academic scorecard to get in to the Ivy+ schools?
At least 25th percentile? 50th?
MIT is 740 math / 720
Anonymous wrote:So what are the "numbers" that recruited athletes need to hit on the academic scorecard to get in to the Ivy+ schools?
At least 25th percentile? 50th?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Checkout this video at the seven minutes mark. He was the top three recruit, ranked #1 in the country at the age of eighteen. However, he couldn't get into Yale or UPenn due to his 1200 SAT score. Good enough to get into UVA. He left UVA after one year to go to UChicago.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Md_2xZ7YIqE&t=1620s
I guess Yale and UPenn do want athletes who also have high SAT scores. Very revealing.
I know multiple kids being recruited by CalTech this year. The coaches are very clear that athletics will do nothing for them in admissions but they want them on teams if they get through admissions.
One of these things is not like the other
Soccer, cross country. What’s interesting is that I also know kids being recruited at MIT and at MIT athletics does help significantly in admissions. But not at CalTech.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS is being recruited by JHU. Was told by the coach that they want to see 1500/34 and top 10% of HS class.
Can confirm.
Yes low-level athletics they will want high academic performers
Hopkins has low level lax?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what are the "numbers" that recruited athletes need to hit on the academic scorecard to get in to the Ivy+ schools?
At least 25th percentile? 50th?
It depends on the sport and how good of an athlete the kid is (i.e., how much the school wants to recruit him/her). Not all recruited athletes are the same...for top recruits, test optional applies. Before TO, I heard of football recruits at H/Y/P getting in with a 21 on ACT. For less desirable recruits, the test scores will need to be higher. This also varies by sport. Some sports are filled with high income kids with high test scores (sailing, squash, etc.). Probably all those kids need high test across-the-board. For other sports (football in particular given how big rosters are and that the number of kids in the country playing football is falling), there's going to be way more flexibility. There is very little uniformity in college athletic recruiting from school-to-school, sport-to-sport, recruit-to-recruit.