Anonymous wrote:^Nice try but that’s the visitors side for the HC- Harvard game. When Holy Cross played BC in 2023 there were 15000 HC fans at the game in Chestnut Hill. Post a clip of that game.
Anonymous wrote:^Nice try but that’s the visitors side for the HC- Harvard game. When Holy Cross played BC in 2023 there were 15000 HC fans at the game in Chestnut Hill. Post a clip of that game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Duke, Tulane and Vandy. Midsized privates in competitive conferences.
Duke football culture...lol
They’re trying hard to build it up. It will never be anything like the SEC schools (or Duke basketball!)
But it’s much more of an event than it was 10 years ago and nothing like it was in the 90s.
Anonymous wrote:^Agree about Holy Cross they are the only non- Ivy school that plays both Harvard and Yale annually. Their fans travel well on road games. For a small school 3000 kids they have a very loyal following.
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Anonymous wrote:Davidson home football stadium capacity is tiny at 5,000. Most high schools have bigger stadiums.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Davidson home football attendance is very small.
It’s a small school. 2,000 kids, maybe less. The question is whether a solid percentage of those 2,000 kids make it a priority to attend home games.
Like, if my sports-loving kid were a freshman at Davidson next year, would it be easy for them to find a similarly sports-loving crew to go watch football, basketball, and lax games? And when they’re at football and basketball games, is it fun?
For reference, they’re at a relatively small public high school in New England- 200 per grade, so 800 kids total. The student turnout for home games is loud and very fun. Not huge in terms of numbers because the school is relatively small. But active, loud, and fun.
To use the SEC comparison, of course DC’s football game experience is nothing like the big high schools in Texas! But it’s great for its size/scale/location. Looking for LACs that are similar.
They should just go to a university where people make sports their identity then.
They don’t want a big school.
Their first priority is to go to a small LAC (for academic and other non-sports reasons).
Their second priority is that the LAC they choose has as much school spirit and sports participation as possible given the size and type of school.
Backtrack then. Find a medium school with strong sports culture that has a cohort small enough to be like an LAC.
They don’t want a medium-sized school.
They want a small LAC that is < 3000.
Again, we would love first-hand insights about which of the < 3000 LACs have strong sports culture given their size.
Holy Cross is one the better options
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Davidson home football attendance is very small.
It’s a small school. 2,000 kids, maybe less. The question is whether a solid percentage of those 2,000 kids make it a priority to attend home games.
Like, if my sports-loving kid were a freshman at Davidson next year, would it be easy for them to find a similarly sports-loving crew to go watch football, basketball, and lax games? And when they’re at football and basketball games, is it fun?
For reference, they’re at a relatively small public high school in New England- 200 per grade, so 800 kids total. The student turnout for home games is loud and very fun. Not huge in terms of numbers because the school is relatively small. But active, loud, and fun.
To use the SEC comparison, of course DC’s football game experience is nothing like the big high schools in Texas! But it’s great for its size/scale/location. Looking for LACs that are similar.
They should just go to a university where people make sports their identity then.
They don’t want a big school.
Their first priority is to go to a small LAC (for academic and other non-sports reasons).
Their second priority is that the LAC they choose has as much school spirit and sports participation as possible given the size and type of school.
Backtrack then. Find a medium school with strong sports culture that has a cohort small enough to be like an LAC.
They don’t want a medium-sized school.
They want a small LAC that is < 3000.
Again, we would love first-hand insights about which of the < 3000 LACs have strong sports culture given their size.