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Post by breezy on Apr 8, 2019 11:40:08 GMT -5
The spring football game is this Saturday, April 13.
On Monday, April 15, the Evaluation Period begins and runs through May 31. I anticipate that we will see a flood of offers during this period, especially since the Evaluation Period includes evaluation of both athletic ability and academic qualifications. The coaching staff wants to be sure that a potential recruit will be able to be admitted before it makes an offer.
There are 22 seniors listed on the 2019 roster (and 70 underclassmen, for a total of 92 -- which is 2 above the PL maximum and will have to be adjusted before the season begins). Based on that, I expect that we will be targeting a recruit class of approximately 20 players (subject to attrition, potential 5th year seniors next year, and possible transfers).
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Post by breezy on Apr 15, 2019 19:00:38 GMT -5
OFFER #13 --
QB HUNTER HELMS, 6-2, 200, Gray Collegiate Academy, West Columbia, SC Twitter: @hh_7251 Hudl highlights: www.hudl.com/profile/9532903/Hunter-Helms Rated -- Rivals: 3* (5.5) Other offers: Troy, Elon.
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Post by breezy on Apr 16, 2019 6:36:31 GMT -5
OFFER #14 --
TE COLE FINNEY, 6-6, 225, Hingham HS, Hingham, MA Twitter: @colefinney82 Hudl highlights: www.hudl.com/profile/7758601/Cole-Finney Rated -- Rivals: 3* (5.5); 247: 3* (82) Other offers: Air Force, Army, Fordham, Dartmouth, UMass
The first 14 offers include 4 Massachusetts recruits!
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Post by dharry13 on Apr 20, 2019 12:25:49 GMT -5
Offer #15 OL Mac Duda from PA. Offers from Colgate, Lehigh, Robert Morris to name a few. Recent visits to BC and a number of Ivies.
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Post by rgs318 on Apr 20, 2019 12:28:37 GMT -5
Is this him? AO1 | Thomas Jefferson High School OT | Class of 2020 | 6’4” 285 lbs. | 2x WPIAL Champion | First Team All-Conference OT | 1420 SAT
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Post by dharry13 on Apr 20, 2019 13:01:58 GMT -5
That’s him
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Post by breezy on Apr 20, 2019 14:00:08 GMT -5
Thanks, dharry13. OFFER #15 --
OL MAC DUDA, 6-4, 285, Thomas Jefferson HS, Jefferson Hills, PA Twitter: @mduda72 Hudl highlights: www.hudl.com/profile/8203964/Mac-Duda 19 other offers: Bowling Green, Central Michigan, Kent State, Toledo, Western Michigan, Youngstown State, Harvard, Columbia, Dartmouth, Cornell, Penn, Princeton, Yale, Lafayette, Lehigh, Colgate, Fordham, Duquesne, Robert Morris.
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Post by jsherman on Apr 21, 2019 22:13:03 GMT -5
In one of the earlier comments in this thread, there was a discussion about recruits choosing HC over specific ivy league schools. E.g. Harvard for instance. My guess, simply stating that if you had two offers, one HC and one Harvard, financials would be a major decision point because Harvard doesn't offer athletic scholarships to my knowledge.
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Apr 22, 2019 6:34:00 GMT -5
In one of the earlier comments in this thread, there was a discussion about recruits choosing HC over specific ivy league schools. E.g. Harvard for instance. My guess, simply stating that if you had two offers, one HC and one Harvard, financials would be a major decision point because Harvard doesn't offer athletic scholarships to my knowledge. As you are rather new to the board, the issue of 'scholarships' offered by HYP (Harvard, Yale, and Princeton) has been long-discussed on this forum. HYP are singled out among the Ivies as they are the most generous with their need-based financial aid. A recruited football player with a family income of $65,000 or less attends Harvard for free.. Twenty percent of Harvard's undergraduates qualify for this level of aid. A recruited football player with a family income between $65,000 and $150,000 will pay between 0 and 10 percent of the family's income to attend Harvard. A recruited football player with a family income above $150,000 will pay proportionately more, but can still receive aid. According to Harvard, there are several hundred undergraduates (about 500?) with family incomes above $250,000 who receive financial aid. About 2,000 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income between $60,000 and $160,000. About 1100 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income less than $60,000. Fifty five percent of Harvard's 6700 undergraduates receive some financial aid from Harvard. Harvard does not include loans in its financial aid package, and I believe still does not consider home equity in calculating parent's assets. At Holy Cross, the number of football players who can receive any form of financial aid is capped at 85 by the NCAA. The NCAA caps the number of full scholarships that can be offered by FCS schools at 63; the Patriot caps this at 60. Which means a significant percentage of rostered football players at HC receive a partial rather than a full scholarship. There is a belief by some on this board, including myself, that the number of full scholarship equivalents rostered on a HYP football team exceeds 63, and might even exceed 85. (Eighty-five full scholarships is the FBS cap.) This is legal. The Patriot League (and other private schools in FCS) also get squeezed by the public universities. As the cost of attendance at a public university such as the University of New Hampshire is substantially less than at a private college such as HC, a half scholarship for a football recruit at HC will cost his parents substantially more than a half scholarship offered by UNH. The other big selling point for HYP coaches when recruiting; once you are admitted with whatever financial aid package you receive, you will continue receiving that level of aid even if you no longer play football.
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Post by lou on Apr 22, 2019 6:57:32 GMT -5
UNH tuition for non NH resident $30k, HC $47k
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Apr 22, 2019 7:07:35 GMT -5
UNH tuition for non NH resident $30k, HC $47k Yesteryear's $. HC tuition for 2019-20 is $54,000. UNH is $15,000 for resident, $26,500 for regional resident, and $32,000 for non-resident.
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Post by rgs318 on Apr 22, 2019 7:27:50 GMT -5
Pak, what is a "regional resident?"
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Post by KY Crusader 75 on Apr 22, 2019 8:59:24 GMT -5
Pak, what is a "regional resident?" I'd have to guess ME & VT, or perhaps all New England
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Post by Pakachoag Phreek on Apr 22, 2019 9:13:52 GMT -5
Pak, what is a "regional resident?" I'd have to guess ME & VT, or perhaps all New England All six New England states. nebhe.org/tuitionbreak/
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Post by rgs318 on Apr 22, 2019 9:17:24 GMT -5
Thanks, pak .
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Post by longsuffering on Apr 22, 2019 10:58:46 GMT -5
In one of the earlier comments in this thread, there was a discussion about recruits choosing HC over specific ivy league schools. E.g. Harvard for instance. My guess, simply stating that if you had two offers, one HC and one Harvard, financials would be a major decision point because Harvard doesn't offer athletic scholarships to my knowledge. As you are rather new to the board, the issue of 'scholarships' offered by HYP (Harvard, Yale, and Princeton) has been long-discussed on this forum. HYP are singled out among the Ivies as they are the most generous with their need-based financial aid. A recruited football player with a family income of $65,000 or less attends Harvard for free.. Twenty percent of Harvard's undergraduates qualify for this level of aid. A recruited football player with a family income between $65,000 and $150,000 will pay between 0 and 10 percent of the family's income to attend Harvard. A recruited football player with a family income above $150,000 will pay proportionately more, but can still receive aid. According to Harvard, there are several hundred undergraduates (about 500?) with family incomes above $250,000 who receive financial aid. About 2,000 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income between $60,000 and $160,000. About 1100 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income less than $60,000. Fifty five percent of Harvard's 6700 undergraduates receive some financial aid from Harvard. Harvard does not include loans in its financial aid package, and I believe still does not consider home equity in calculating parent's assets. At Holy Cross, the number of football players who can receive any form of financial aid is capped at 85 by the NCAA. The NCAA caps the number of full scholarships that can be offered by FCS schools at 63; the Patriot caps this at 60. Which means a significant percentage of rostered football players at HC receive a partial rather than a full scholarship. There is a belief by some on this board, including myself, that the number of full scholarship equivalents rostered on a HYP football team exceeds 63, and might even exceed 85. (Eighty-five full scholarships is the FBS cap.) This is legal. The Patriot League (and other private schools in FCS) also get squeezed by the public universities. As the cost of attendance at a public university such as the University of New Hampshire is substantially less than at a private college such as HC, a half scholarship for a football recruit at HC will cost his parents substantially more than a half scholarship offered by UNH. The other big selling point for HYP coaches when recruiting; once you are admitted with whatever financial aid package you receive, you will continue receiving that level of aid even if you no longer play football. As always, extremely thankful for the knowledge you impart PP. What this says to me is that Cap Management is as necessary a skill as game planning, recruiting, motivation, teaching, staff relations, etc. for PL head football coaches. I hope Coach Chesney has qualified support for this phase of the game on his staff and in the Athletic Dept. There's alot of administrative employees in the Athletic Dept. We've seen how they can get involved to fire and suspend coaches, I'd like to think they can also add value with expertise in cap Management, working with admissions, etc. to support the coaches so the wheel doesn't have to be reinvented with every coaching change.
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Post by gks on Apr 22, 2019 11:53:44 GMT -5
As you are rather new to the board, the issue of 'scholarships' offered by HYP (Harvard, Yale, and Princeton) has been long-discussed on this forum. HYP are singled out among the Ivies as they are the most generous with their need-based financial aid. A recruited football player with a family income of $65,000 or less attends Harvard for free.. Twenty percent of Harvard's undergraduates qualify for this level of aid. A recruited football player with a family income between $65,000 and $150,000 will pay between 0 and 10 percent of the family's income to attend Harvard. A recruited football player with a family income above $150,000 will pay proportionately more, but can still receive aid. According to Harvard, there are several hundred undergraduates (about 500?) with family incomes above $250,000 who receive financial aid. About 2,000 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income between $60,000 and $160,000. About 1100 undergraduates at Harvard are from families with a family income less than $60,000. Fifty five percent of Harvard's 6700 undergraduates receive some financial aid from Harvard. Harvard does not include loans in its financial aid package, and I believe still does not consider home equity in calculating parent's assets. At Holy Cross, the number of football players who can receive any form of financial aid is capped at 85 by the NCAA. The NCAA caps the number of full scholarships that can be offered by FCS schools at 63; the Patriot caps this at 60. Which means a significant percentage of rostered football players at HC receive a partial rather than a full scholarship. There is a belief by some on this board, including myself, that the number of full scholarship equivalents rostered on a HYP football team exceeds 63, and might even exceed 85. (Eighty-five full scholarships is the FBS cap.) This is legal. The Patriot League (and other private schools in FCS) also get squeezed by the public universities. As the cost of attendance at a public university such as the University of New Hampshire is substantially less than at a private college such as HC, a half scholarship for a football recruit at HC will cost his parents substantially more than a half scholarship offered by UNH. The other big selling point for HYP coaches when recruiting; once you are admitted with whatever financial aid package you receive, you will continue receiving that level of aid even if you no longer play football. As always, extremely thankful for the knowledge you impart PP. What this says to me is that Cap Management is as necessary a skill as game planning, recruiting, motivation, teaching, staff relations, etc. for PL head football coaches. I hope Coach Chesney has qualified support for this phase of the game on his staff and in the Athletic Dept. There's alot of administrative employees in the Athletic Dept. We've seen how they can get involved to fire and suspend coaches, I'd like to think they can also add value with expertise in cap Management, working with admissions, etc. to support the coaches so the wheel doesn't have to be reinvented with every coaching change. Word was that Chesney was working with less than 10 equivalencies while at Assumption. I think the D2 limit is 35 or something near that. He knows how to cap manage.
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Post by nhteamer on Apr 22, 2019 13:05:44 GMT -5
FEWER
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Post by rgs318 on Apr 22, 2019 13:47:31 GMT -5
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Post by longsuffering on Apr 22, 2019 14:28:49 GMT -5
Makes me happy to hear. Assumption success is even more impressive based on resources available.
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Post by jsherman on Apr 22, 2019 19:51:24 GMT -5
Scholarship > financial was my point. But I also understand what you're saying as well...
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Post by dharry13 on Apr 23, 2019 17:12:33 GMT -5
Offer #16 David “Tyler” Jones. Safety from West Orange. Not sure what state. Other offer from Univ of Missouri
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Post by breezy on Apr 23, 2019 17:34:03 GMT -5
Thanks. At my grandson’s little league game — will research when I get home.
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Post by Crucis#1 on Apr 23, 2019 18:47:35 GMT -5
/photo/1
West Orange High School is in Winter Garden Florida.
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Post by breezy on Apr 23, 2019 20:04:18 GMT -5
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