Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Gg1j18
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Gg1j18
Many many hs athletes do not transition well in to college life for many reasons
This is more relevant to athletes
You need to prepare yourself for the fact that some who are used to being the big dog
May no even sniff the turf for a few years

And remember
You are NOT interviewing for a position,
you are the Interviewer.
You are the one seeking out what you want, not the other way around.


Top 20 programs own you morning noon and night 365 days a year. You are in that school to play lacrosse period. School is clearly second with kids guided into easy majors they have no interest in. Pick a mid to low D1 or D2 program for a nice lax / school / social life balance. They are still playing a game and in 4 years it is over


Even more reason by very Leary of signing into a D1 program when you are younger
Most 8 grade kids have zero idea what they want to be when they grow up
Unless you want to enjoy your under water basket weaving degree


The Final 8 teams last year, to the right is their US News Academic Ranking:

1 - Maryland - 57
2 - North Carolina - 30
3 - Syracuse - 61
4 - Duke - 8
5 - Northwestern - 12
6 - Penn State - 47
7 - Princeton - 1
8 - Loyola - 3 - Regional University (North)



The Computer Rankings have the following in the Top 25. Academic ranking to the right:

Florida - 47
Virginia - 26
Boston College - 30
Stony Brook - 89
Stanford - 4
Albany - 129
JMU - 7 - Regional University (South)
Notre Dame - 18
Cornell - 15
Penn - 9
Louisville - 168
Hopkins - 10
Southern Cal - 23
UMass - 75
Ohio State - 52
Navy - 9 - National Liberal Arts Colleges
Harvard - 2

Some great schools with some really good lacrosse. I don't think all of the girls who attend these schools major in basket weaving. But I guess you are right, why should you challenge yourself? When you are looking to start your career nobody is going to want to hire someone who graduated from a great university and competed at the highest level in a Division 1 sport. Take it easy, have some fun. Go to a school that you can get into without being a lacrosse player. Play club and tell people that you didn't want to work hard.

Six of the Top 10 Universities in the country are Top 25 Lacrosse schools. Why would anyone advise people to take the easy road?

19 of the Top 25 lacrosse schools are considered Top 50 Universities. Challenge yourself, you can do well in the classroom and on the athletic field.


Great schools with great lacrosse where you will get a degree that you can proudly display. But if you want to be a doctor, nurse, engineer or architect you are going to have a problem playing at these schools where its lacrosse first and academics second. This really only affects a handful of kids so its not a big deal unless your kid is one of them. When a 13 or 14 year old verbal's they have no idea what they want to do so its easy to guide them to an approved major. Good luck to all on being one of the first 2020's to verbal!



Throw in the following school who are all competing to be the best that they can be. All of these schools could be in ranked in the Top 25 at any time.

Academic Rank to the right:

Colgate - 19 - National Liberal Arts Colleges
Georgetown - 21
Vanderbilt - 15
Lehigh - 47
Yale - 3
Dartmouth - 12
Michigan - 29
Brown - 14
Boston Uni - 41

27 of the 34 schools listed are considered to be Top 50 Universities. Please stop with the basket weaving BS. The fact is, at many of these schools you can major in whatever you want. And after you graduate you can go get an advanced degree in your chosen field.

Reality is that some kids can go play lacrosse at a Top 10 or 20 lacrosse school major in whatever they want and then go on to grad school or medical school or law school. Also, not everyone wants to go on to medical school or become an engineer. Why do some of you want to put down the kids who have a strong desire to compete? Is it because your kid is not being recruited by the top programs?