The girls win the state championship every year so I assume they actively recruit?
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Does St John's Country Day recruit players?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostProbably call it financially aid or assistance.
What you see is the best players playing in a state soccer final. What you don't see, is the parents working their tail off at night cleaning classrooms, or the student earning national merit scholarships, or singing in the school choir, etc.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAll private schools provide a combination of the following: financial "need based" aid, academic scholarships, fine arts scholarships, and work study (parent works, student studies). None, I repeat, none provides athletic scholarships!!!
What you see is the best players playing in a state soccer final. What you don't see, is the parents working their tail off at night cleaning classrooms, or the student earning national merit scholarships, or singing in the school choir, etc.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCorrect. No athletic $, Anything off the price is earned with academics or financial aid or other. As someone said if you're going to go the private route and you're a good player, the possibility of playing on a state championship team is a big draw. Happens in many sports and certain schools are known for the prowess in certain sports.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCall it whatever you like, the truth is the lines are blurred when it comes to athletics. If a school wants to recruit an athlete they just get creative with the financial aid offered.
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For what its worth ... one of things I found to be very different when I moved to Florida several years ago from Maryland (where there are many, many private schools -- some as big as public schools -- most of whom take athletics very seriously and recruit athletes as has been described in this thread) was that the private schools were allowed to compete for State Championships against the public schools. Back in Maryland, private schools regularly compete against public schools during the regular season, but, because the playing field isn't level in that the private schools could "recruit" whereas the public schools could only draw from their neighborhood, the public and private schools have separate tournaments for championships; both of which are classified by size of the school. I don't know which system is better -- because of Maryland's system, you never really knew who had the best team (although the better public school programs usually played the better private schools during the season, so you had a pretty good idea) -- just making an observation.
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