Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Completely wrong.
Nope. They can't get the female athletic recruits in and they are taking every basketball/baseball applicant. It's all about the boys' sports there now.
Again. Wrong. Total fiction.
Where's the link to all the articles about the Maret female athletes playing Division I sports? You can go with your knee-jerk defense of Maret, but they've sold out on their academic reputation to pursue sports success in BOYS' basketball and BOYS' baseball, and they do not care what happens with the girls' sports teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Completely wrong.
Nope. They can't get the female athletic recruits in and they are taking every basketball/baseball applicant. It's all about the boys' sports there now.
Again. Wrong. Total fiction.
Where's the link to all the articles about the Maret female athletes playing Division I sports? You can go with your knee-jerk defense of Maret, but they've sold out on their academic reputation to pursue sports success in BOYS' basketball and BOYS' baseball, and they do not care what happens with the girls' sports teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Completely wrong.
Nope. They can't get the female athletic recruits in and they are taking every basketball/baseball applicant. It's all about the boys' sports there now.
Again. Wrong. Total fiction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Completely wrong.
Nope. They can't get the female athletic recruits in and they are taking every basketball/baseball applicant. It's all about the boys' sports there now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Completely wrong.
Anonymous wrote:There is a real issue of equity with Maret re: admissions for athletics. They let the baseball coach and the basketball coach have golden tickets for admissions and do not admit talented girl athletes. The Maret athletic culture is now girls watching the boys teams. Sad, and communicating a poor message.
Anonymous wrote:Lets be honest, 95% of the kids in this area who plays high school hoops hang it up after college.
I applaud the basketball players in this area who decide to enroll into smaller independent schools (Landon, Bullis, Sidwell, Maret etc. etc.) vs enrolling into the WCAC. Othern than maybe Gonzaga the academics in the WCAC is just not even on the same level to any of the smaller indepedent schools.
These kids better be investing in their education and hopefully the high schools coaches at the schools listed above are pushing their players where they can use their talents to get into the best education opportunity available.
Yes this area has produced a few NBA super stars (Durant) but compared to the amount of kids playing AAU ball, its very very rare for a kid to make it into the NBA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point is that posting are positioning Maret as a football/basketball factory and it is not. One or two kids a decade is not a Div. I factory. If you want a definition look it up Dematha. If you want a comparable example in the indy schools look at Landon lacrosse.
The difference is, Maret is TINY. Just 70-80 kids per grade.
That does not diminish the PP' s point at all. You are talking about 1 or 2 Division 1 propsepcts in 10 years! Bullis (where my DD attended) has more than that on this year's team alone.
Besides that, look at the schools recruiting the kids in the article. They are low D1 and D2 schools. Nobody is going to Kentucky or Syracuse from Maret to play basketball. In fact, Maret has as many girls currently playing D1 basketball as it does boys who are playing D1 basketball. These kids are from PG county and those MS basketball programs usually feed into WCAC schools. These kids chose Maret and academics over basketball. Give them some credit for that. It is no different from some other prominent independent schools who recruit kids who are in the arts - violin or dance. Folks here are just placing their own negative value judgments on athletics.
If you could name just two kids who travel from PG county to Maret (or Bullis or ...) who 1. are standout cello players and 2. were recruited by Maret and who 3. were put on a slower academic track in recognition of and gratitude for their cello contributions to the school .....
Your point would be a valid one. Same goes for a ballet standout from PG county or a promising and published fiction writer. They don't exist, pal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point is that posting are positioning Maret as a football/basketball factory and it is not. One or two kids a decade is not a Div. I factory. If you want a definition look it up Dematha. If you want a comparable example in the indy schools look at Landon lacrosse.
The difference is, Maret is TINY. Just 70-80 kids per grade.
That does not diminish the PP' s point at all. You are talking about 1 or 2 Division 1 propsepcts in 10 years! Bullis (where my DD attended) has more than that on this year's team alone.
Besides that, look at the schools recruiting the kids in the article. They are low D1 and D2 schools. Nobody is going to Kentucky or Syracuse from Maret to play basketball. In fact, Maret has as many girls currently playing D1 basketball as it does boys who are playing D1 basketball. These kids are from PG county and those MS basketball programs usually feed into WCAC schools. These kids chose Maret and academics over basketball. Give them some credit for that. It is no different from some other prominent independent schools who recruit kids who are in the arts - violin or dance. Folks here are just placing their own negative value judgments on athletics.