Anonymous wrote:Men's tennis.
Many D1 programs have been dropped in the last 20 years in order to comply with title IX. Not just small schools either, but rather schools with large athletic departments, such as :
UConn
Iowa
Minnesota
Colorado
Kansas
Colorado St.
West Virginia
and local schools :
GW
American
Maryland
Heavy international recruiting. Look at the rosters of the some the southern schools- some are 100 percent foreign.
A max of 4.5 scholarships for men, to be split amongst 10 players or so.
Men's college tennis - great experience.
But, you are unlikely to get even a fraction of your investment back !
Anonymous wrote:Most sports- besides football, basketball, track and field and womens gymnastics have very little scholarship money.
The big lie around here is “my kid got a full soccer/lacrosse scholarship.”
Anonymous wrote:Bump. What’s the easiest? I’m a Tiger mom looking for any edge
Anonymous wrote:Sports that you don't have to be rich to play because then your kid is competing with everyone. If you pick an expensive sport, such as ice hockey, your kid is competing against a pretty small share of the population. This is also part of the reason basketball is a tougher sport for scholarships/being recruited.
Anonymous wrote:Equestrian is the hardest to get a scholarship. Anyone who qualifies spends multiple 6 figures per year on horses and showing, so there is no need for scholarship money as the family is already wealthy — full pay is cheaper than going to Wellington for the winter.
I board some college student horses that cost WELL into six figures in our college town. They aren’t even on the equestrian team. Why bother when your own horse is so superior to anything used for team sport?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Football
Basketball
The rest why?
they need a female sport to balance out football- so gymnastics and volleyball
track and field is revenue generating
Anonymous wrote:Football
Basketball
The rest why?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Basketball and football are the only sports to give full rides for everyone on the roster.
Every other sports get a handful and spread the wealth amongst the team in the form of partial. So consider spending tons of money on your kid and unless DC is absolute beast, the odds of getting full ride are not that great outside of those 2 sports.
Full scholarship sports are football, basketball, track and field and women’s gymnastics
You forgot women’s volleyball, tennis, and gymnastics.
Forgot what exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think fencing is hardest
It’s one of the hardest for getting a scholarship. It’s one of the best for getting an admissions edge. The reason both statements are true is because it tends to be a very, very wealthy sport so admissions officers who are hoping for future donors admit fencers.