Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]iAnonymous wrote:Golf?
Yep 6-7 players on team gotta be it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]iAnonymous wrote:Golf?
Yep 6-7 players on team gotta be it
Could be squash or tennis but not likely tennis as to be recruited D1 at a top school they are likely going pro not quitting.
Anonymous wrote:How could any sport with just 7 players have an athlete described as "blue chip?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are not taking into account the serious negative consequences of taking up a slot and then quitting for academic reasons. The other team members can be absolutely brutal. If this is the plan going in, make sure your DS has a full social circle outside his sport team.
Her DS will never see the other team members again if he doesn’t join the team, so that won’t be an issue. And he doesn’t need to “have a full social circle” by August FFS. Club sports, Greek life, part-time job, study groups are all ways to make friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]iAnonymous wrote:Golf?
Yep 6-7 players on team gotta be it
Could be squash or tennis but not likely tennis as to be recruited D1 at a top school they are likely going pro not quitting.
Anonymous wrote:[mastodon]iAnonymous wrote:Golf?
Yep 6-7 players on team gotta be it
Anonymous wrote:Golf?
Anonymous wrote:Golf?
Anonymous wrote:I guessed fencing, too. I know for a fact this is something that has happened at Duke, Brown etc. Recruits use it to get in then get "injured." One of the Ivy coaches actually said he had a very negative opinion of the fencing club and would stop taking their recruits... but as for the individual fencers, this is not policed so no downside. Plus it is not a scholarship sport.