Anonymous wrote:Public hs
Men’s soccer
ECNL
3.9 WGPA (4.1 at graduation)
1460
top D3
Good financial aid and scholarship package
Guaranteed playing time
Anonymous wrote:I think it has been a while for Penn- maybe 80s for the men and early 2000s for the women.
Penn came in 2nd for indoor this year in both men and women
Anonymous wrote:The individual sports still have a team component. It is very important to Penn and Princeton to win the Ivy League Championship in track and field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivy recruiting can get a little whacky. My kid attended a recruiting session run by the Harvard baseball coach. Kind of a gruff old guy who wasn’t afraid to be maybe too honest.
For a top recruit he wanted at least a 1350…he might go lower for a true Power 4 player who he honestly thought wanted Harvard (ie a dream recruit who is too good for Ivy play).
He mentioned that every now and then he will meet a recruit who is both a great player and a 1580 SAT super impressive candidate. In that situation he may get greedy and not select that kid as a top recruit because he is very confident the kid will get in his own…so he is getting a top player for “free”. He will use his top slots for the second best 1350 kid and the other kid gets an asterisk so admissions know the coach likes him, but the kid needs to get in on their own.
Very similar experience here. Duke fencing coach refused to support DC's application and formally recruit DC because they "could get in on their own." We were very frustrated as DH is a Duke alum & we wanted that "closure" that comes with being recruited formally. DC is at HYPSM now on the fencing team so nothing to complain about now. Stats below:
Public magnet HS
4.0 UW 4.93 W
1590 SAT
Are the pool lanes reserved for the recruits? Is there no intramural or club team?Anonymous wrote:I would also like to point out that most athletic recruiting doesn't work out. My child was an incredible swimmer. Being recruited to top D3 but wanted an Ivy. Ended up at the Ivy (no recruiting) and cannot do the sport bc not good enough.
So yes I suppose sports *can* be the ticket but it is just so so so hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ivy recruiting can get a little whacky. My kid attended a recruiting session run by the Harvard baseball coach. Kind of a gruff old guy who wasn’t afraid to be maybe too honest.
For a top recruit he wanted at least a 1350…he might go lower for a true Power 4 player who he honestly thought wanted Harvard (ie a dream recruit who is too good for Ivy play).
He mentioned that every now and then he will meet a recruit who is both a great player and a 1580 SAT super impressive candidate. In that situation he may get greedy and not select that kid as a top recruit because he is very confident the kid will get in his own…so he is getting a top player for “free”. He will use his top slots for the second best 1350 kid and the other kid gets an asterisk so admissions know the coach likes him, but the kid needs to get in on their own.
Very similar experience here. Duke fencing coach refused to support DC's application and formally recruit DC because they "could get in on their own." We were very frustrated as DH is a Duke alum & we wanted that "closure" that comes with being recruited formally. DC is at HYPSM now on the fencing team so nothing to complain about now. Stats below:
Public magnet HS
4.0 UW 4.93 W
1590 SAT
Thanks for sharing. This is so interesting. Wondering if it's better to avoid the pursuing this path altogether if DC is otherwise qualified for the school (+legacy)
Anonymous wrote:I would also like to point out that most athletic recruiting doesn't work out. My child was an incredible swimmer. Being recruited to top D3 but wanted an Ivy. Ended up at the Ivy (no recruiting) and cannot do the sport bc not good enough.
So yes I suppose sports *can* be the ticket but it is just so so so hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll Start:
Private School
Track and Field (Field)
UW 3.9; SAT 1480 (one try); 11AP Classes (Bio/Calc/Phys/Chem, Eng (2), History (2), Stats, AA History, Geo) all 4s and 5s. Remainder were all honors classes.
Well liked by teachers, great recommendation letters.
State Champion for their event, Top Ten Nationally for their event
Admitted to non-HYP Ivy within the last 3 years (SAT was submitted at request of coach).
Is this a contest?
I don’t understand the post either. I was a 4:06 miler in the 70’s. Princeton only marginally cared about grades - which were pretty good - as well as SAT’s - which were also good - but I held zero illusions I was the ideal Ivy candidate or that running fast made me well liked or that I was anything other than lousy life skills. The operating principle remains the same. Athletics is a means for a kid to express themselves- most won’t be able to compete and make a living especially in a sport like track - and go where a school is the best fit and not as a brag for parents about the Ivy League. I had no parents in my life and chose a school that gave athletic scholarships - I thought some about Princeton later on but going to the Ivy League wasn’t all that relevant. With no parents, the issue at hand was whether I was going to attend a place which accelerated my maturity and focus, which needed a lot of bolstering at the time. My kids did go to Princeton but no athletics and no parental helicoptering. Still not sure it was the best choice in balance but they were mature and it was their choice.