Originally posted by Unregistered
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The ugly truth about playing college soccer
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Unregistered
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostStill trying to figure out what the point is. Granted that the majority of players stay close to home and college coaches know that when recruiting, but the coaches have to have a winning program so their needs to be talent first beyond the recruit just having the right zip code. It goes back to this misconception that coaches scout whole teams rather than the best 1-2 players from a team.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWell done by you, but I should note getting that much is fairly unique. That equates to over $40k a year and for the most of us, that isn't a scholarship that is achievable.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWell done by you, but I should note getting that much is fairly unique. That equates to over $40k a year and for the most of us, that isn't a scholarship that is achievable.
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Unregistered
Here are the 45 D1 women's soccer programs in the Northeast
Boston College - Chestnut Hill - Massachusetts - Private - ACC
Boston University - Boston - Massachusetts - Private - Patriot
Harvard - Cambridge - Massachusetts - Private - Ivy League
Holy Cross - Worcester - Massachusetts - Private - Patriot
Merrimack[g] - North Andover - Massachusetts - Private - Northeast
Northeastern - Boston - Massachusetts - Private - CAA
UMass - Amherst - Massachusetts - Public - Atlantic 10
UMass Lowell - Lowell - Massachusetts - Public - America East
Central Connecticut - New Britain - Connecticut - Public - Northeast
Fairfield - Fairfield - Connecticut - Private - Metro Atlantic
Hartford - West Hartford - Connecticut - Private - America East
Quinnipiac - Hamden - Connecticut - Private - Metro Atlantic
Sacred Heart - Fairfield - Connecticut - Private - Northeast
UConn - Storrs - Connecticut - Public - The American
Yale - New Haven - Connecticut - Private - Ivy League
Maine - Orono - Maine - Public - America East
Dartmouth - Hanover - New Hampshire - Private - Ivy League
New Hampshire - Durham - New Hampshire - Public - America East
Brown - Providence - Rhode Island - Private - Ivy League
Bryant - Smithfield - Rhode Island - Private - Northeast
Providence - Providence - Rhode Island - Private - Big East
Rhode Island - Kingston - Rhode Island - Public - Atlantic 10
Vermont - Burlington - Vermont - Public - America East
Albany - Albany - New York - Public - America East
Army - West Point - New York - U.S. Service Academy - Patriot
Binghamton - Binghamton - New York - Public - America East
Buffalo - Buffalo - New York - Public - MAC
Canisius - Buffalo - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
Colgate - Hamilton - New York - Private - Patriot
Columbia - New York City - New York - Private - Ivy League
Cornell - Ithaca - New York - Private - Ivy League
Fordham - New York City - New York - Private - Atlantic 10
Hofstra - Hempstead - New York - Private - CAA
Iona - New Rochelle - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
LIU[c] - Brookville[d] - New York - Private - Northeast[f]
Manhattan - Riverdale - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
Marist - Poughkeepsie - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
Niagara - Lewiston - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
St. Bonaventure - St. Bonaventure - New York - Private - Atlantic 10
St. Francis Brooklyn - Brooklyn - New York - Private - Northeast
St. John's - Jamaica - New York - Private - Big East
Siena - Loudonville - New York - Private - Metro Atlantic
Stony Brook - Stony Brook - New York - Public - America East
Syracuse - Syracuse - New York - Private - ACC
Wagner - Staten Island - New York - Private - Northeast
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy kid got $140,000 to attend Syracuse and she's not even an athlete. A-/B+ grades in HS, SAT of 1300. Family income of 150k. Point is that private schools very rarely charge full sticker price and there is lots of funny money out there. If you want to test it, ask the school if your kid doesn't play soccer there, what would the other aid be. You'd be surprised how close it would be to the average athletic aid.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostActually, considering all of the money families are pumping into club soccer, yes it is. What are any of the local clubs really doing to market their low level D1 players to the local low level D1 programs? They should all have the coaches at those programs on speed dial.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIt's about $15,000 a year for an ECNL team with travel. My daughter is a senior and is getting approximately $170,000 in D1 scholarship money. She has played ECNL for three years so I am getting a return on my $45-50K
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe quality of the coach doesn't matter, its the pipeline that does.
If you pick good coaches, it translates into success for all involved.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy kid got $140,000 to attend Syracuse and she's not even an athlete. A-/B+ grades in HS, SAT of 1300. Family income of 150k. Point is that private schools very rarely charge full sticker price and there is lots of funny money out there. If you want to test it, ask the school if your kid doesn't play soccer there, what would the other aid be. You'd be surprised how close it would be to the average athletic aid.
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Unregistered
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIsn't that the point? Why is that acceptable?
The only thing that comes to mind is if status quo is met to club partners/owners in terms of gross profits.............why ruffle feathers. Therefore lazy AD are allowed to stay and keep earning 100K+ per year to kick a ball around at practice.
Most parents are sheep and scared to lose a spot on "top" teams is another take.
This topic really deserves its own thread to expose this side of broken promises for the u10-12 parents. I would support you opening one with a clever title.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe point is exactly that. The college coaches in this state and in the ones that touch it simply do not find the local talent all that appealing. Another example. Look at Umass. 28 on the roster. Only 7 players from Mass. Actually have 7 internationals.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy kid got $140,000 to attend Syracuse and she's not even an athlete. A-/B+ grades in HS, SAT of 1300. Family income of 150k. Point is that private schools very rarely charge full sticker price and there is lots of funny money out there. If you want to test it, ask the school if your kid doesn't play soccer there, what would the other aid be. You'd be surprised how close it would be to the average athletic aid.
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