Monday, March 17, 2008

The cold reality about sports scholarships

Two words: ice hockey! That's the sport that attracts the most scholarship money, both men's and women's, according to a March 10 New York Times article, "The Scholarship Divide: Expectations Lose to the Reality of Sports Scholarships." But reality falls far below parents' and student athlete's hopes, overall.


At youth sporting events, the sidelines have become the ritual community meeting place, where families sit in rows of folding chairs aligned like church pews. These congregations are diverse in spirit but unified by one gospel: heaven is your child receiving a college athletic scholarship.

Parents sacrifice weekends and vacations to tournaments and specialty camps, spending thousands each year in this quest for the holy grail.

But the expectations of parents and athletes can differ sharply from the financial and cultural realities of college athletics, according to an analysis by The New York Times of previously undisclosed data from the National Collegiate Athletic Association and interviews with dozens of college officials.

Read the rest of the story.

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