Anonymous wrote:"You won't see any Ivy players drafted to the NFL anymore."
Do some research. Yale had two just this year.
Anonymous wrote:"You won't see any Ivy players drafted to the NFL anymore."
Do some research. Yale had two just this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For girls or boys, discuss.
And on the other side, what do you consider the hardest sport to get recruited for if you do not have elite talent?
To add on to the football discussion, if you're a reasonably strong football player on a good high school football team, then, based on my anecdotal observations, it does seem easier to be recruited.
I'm not talking about being recruited to play at D1 football powerhouses like Michigan / Notre Dame / Penn State / Stanford, but being recruited to Ivies and places like Wash U, Bucknell, Washington & Lee, etc. I have seen decent (but not amazing) HS football players receive offers from multiple Ivies. IME, you don't have to be at the absolute top in terms of football or academic prowess to play football at many highly ranked schools.
If you think about it, football teams are large and include many different body types and skills for the various positions.
Hardest sport to be recruited for boys -- maybe basketball. Teams are smaller, height is very important, competition is tough.
Anonymous wrote:For girls or boys, discuss.
And on the other side, what do you consider the hardest sport to get recruited for if you do not have elite talent?
Anonymous wrote:Easiest: fencing. Not a lot of competition.
Anonymous wrote:NCSA for recruiting is not great but they do have good stats on percent of high school kids playing varsity sports that get recruited. Girls ice hockey super high but not boys. Looking at that will give you a sense… some sports are much harder.
Olympian’s in fencing? Don’t make me laugh
Anonymous wrote:The point is nobody fences
That's also wrong. This area is home to some of the top fencers in the world, including two Olympians. You have no idea what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easiest: fencing. Not a lot of competition.
This is absolutely untrue. For the parents pushing their kids into fencing in hopes they will be recruited to Princeton, you have to be one of the top fencers in the country (if not the world). Programs like Princeton, Columbia, and Notre Dame are highly selective, routinely attract the top national and international fencers, and have produced a number of Olympians.
That said, there are D1 and D3 programs, usually at less selective schools, that will recruit lower-rated/ranked fencers.
The point is nobody fences
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Golf
My son is going to play D3 baseball (already committed) but he is injured at the moment. He picked up golf this summer while he heals and loves it and practices obsessively, since he can’t practice baseball. I asked him if his injury doesn’t heal fully would he consider switching to golf in college? He laughed at me and explained the math of how few male golfers can make collegiate teams.
I had no idea!
+1
My DS is a freshman on the golf team at an Ivy, and there are eight members on the golf team. Golf is probably one of the hardest sports to make the team due to roster size. DS also told me that only he and another member of the team are from a middle-class family, the other six members are from very wealthy families. Those wealthy teammates are nice to DS, but they hang out among themselves after golf, and that DS is not part of their cliques.
OTOH,
I knew two women on the golf team at a PAC-10 university; they both had a full ride.
They joked they were not even very good at golf, but because of Title IX, the university was desperate to recruit them.
Not that many girls play golf.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When you say that you are recruited to play in college, do you mean scholarships? or just play on the team?
Rowing: No mens scholarships....it isn't a NCAA sport. Womens rowing is easier than most other sports, but there are fewer total teams. Unlike most other sports, there are very few D2 teams. And the best D3 teams are much better than the weakest D1 teams. The strong D1 teams pretty much require rowers to be over 5'8 or 5'9 with 7:45 or better 2K times...even then the majority will not get even partial scholarships. Someone mentioned coxswains for shorter kids, but very few if any coxswains get scholarships. And it doesn't really help to be athletic....it's a leadership, strategy and steering position.
This can't be true any longer - that was the case 30 years ago and things have become more competitive since then
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:if you are looking for a sport in HS you probably will not be recruited.
this is a dumb discussion
Not true for rowing. Very few people have experience before high school.
The point is nobody fences