The most nerve wracking thing to me about the end game of the recruiting process is the blind faith you put into being told a chit will be used with admissions and your son will get in via ED. I know this will be the case since my sons stats are in line with admission standards as well but just waiting is killer. We didn't apply anywhere else. We are fully bought into this school academically and for baseball. As Tom Petty says (well said) the waiting is the hardest part. Also there is a thread on this site where a promise was not kept which makes me anxious.
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Stay strong! It's just a few more days and then you can breathe and move on to the next part of the journey.
As my Grandmother always said, "Sh*t like this builds character" as well as "There is a lid for every pot" (in baseball and relationships). She never played college baseball, but she was a very wise woman!
Make sure to keep us posted!
Did your son hear back from Lehigh yet? Based on the recruiting cycle for him I have to guess you have other apps in as well...... I just have to gut out a week or two....
Forgot D1 was letter of intent! That makes it easier for you D1 parents.....
Hang in there Gunner. A bunch of us have been there....to diffuse thoughts think of plan B's. That's not being negative, just practical. My son didn't want to hear that, he was confident. But I had to, so that we were prepared to move on quickly. Having said that: I'm sure all will work out.
We were the same as you -- no other apps, and no backup other than Juco.
The coach did do one thing that helped us feel secure - he sent an invite for the kid to buy the same swag and practice jerseys that the team gets.
Hang in there. Anecdotally at least my impression is that it works out the vast majority of the time.
JCG posted:We were the same as you -- no other apps, and no backup other than Juco.
The coach did do one thing that helped us feel secure - he sent an invite for the kid to buy the same swag and practice jerseys that the team gets.
Hang in there. Anecdotally at least my impression is that it works out the vast majority of the time.
JC, that same thing happened to son. It did reduce anxiety
Gunner Mack Jr. posted:
Forgot D1 was letter of intent! That makes it easier for you D1 parents.....
Also waiting on ED. NLI is signed, but admissions letter will put merit aid in writing.
Same here. The extremely low acceptance rate at the school mine is applying ED makes it especially nerve-racking, even with coach support. Feels more like a kamikaze mission. But it is THE school of interest for him and he's going at it with eyes wide open (if that is even possible for a male teenager).
Best of luck to everyone waiting on their ED application. Been there and done that, so glad when it was over.
This is how I've handled it. Twice.
Just remember: the chair has to be dayglo green and it has to be plastic.
smokeminside posted:This is how I've handled it. Twice.
Just remember: the chair has to be dayglo green and it has to be plastic.
Haha - Smoke in rare form..😎
Smoke's courage has inspired me to share. Couldn't get the neon green chair past security, though.
My son is also waiting for his official ED acceptance but he received a likely letter from his HA D3 school about a month ago so that is reassuring. Do your son’s schools issue likely letters to recruits? If not, was an official preread done? If preread was positive I would think that is strong indication of likelihood even if the school doesn’t offer likely letter.
Zoom 2020 posted:My son is also waiting for his official ED acceptance but he received a likely letter from his HA D3 school about a month ago so that is reassuring. Do your son’s schools issue likely letters to recruits? If not, was an official preread done? If preread was positive I would think that is strong indication of likelihood even if the school doesn’t offer likely letter.
They do not do likely letters but the pre-read was done and he was told directly that the coach would use a chit with admissions and that he need only to apply to this one school. I am highly confident he will get accepted based on the meeting with the HC its just natural anxiety kicking in....his scores are in range too. We might not hear until 12/20 I am told too- late ED notification date.
No likely letters are issued by my son's school. Yes, we had pre-reads there and elsewhere. I didn't know there was such a thing as those being "official".
Like so many things, it comes down what you ask the coach. I said, "Do players ever fail to get admitted after they have been told they will get in?"
We liked the answer, so that was that.
Out of curiosity, does anyone know which HA D3’s issue likely letters to athletic recruits? I know Ivy D1’s issue likely letters but not sure how many D3’s do this. From our experience, we know that MIT and Caltech do not issue likely letters (they don’t even do formal prereads), but Hopkins does. Do any NESCAC schools or Pomona or CMS issue likely letters? It would be interesting to see how different HA D3’s go about their recruiting. I don’t understand why schools wouldn’t want to give this option to their recruits to help lock up their class, even MIT and Caltech.
The D3 school my son is applying to did send him a likely letter--a couple of weeks after the ED deadline had passed and he had submitted his application. So I don't feel much anxiety, but I do wonder if something weird was happening behind the scenes and if maybe I should have been (or should be) more worried than I was/am. This is a weird process.
No likely letters with sons NESCAC school. Pre-read with admissions was done and son was told he's on solid footing academically with GPA/ACT being in middle 50% of the previous years accepted students. HC told son he was his top pick (he could have been one of three for all we know) to support through admissions. HC said he was highly confident and that was good enough for us. HC also said : he cannot provide any guarantees though because admissions has the full picture of every candidate, he doesn't.
I haven't heard of any other NESCAC school providing some form of a likely letter.
Anxiety is normal - I sweated quite a bit this same time two years ago. Son never did.
Dirtbag30 posted:Smoke's courage has inspired me to share. Couldn't get the neon green chair past security, though.
Haha... something tells me this will be the greatest three seconds of this dude's life... and that's not all that bad
Well, the thread topic IS "waiting on ED". He now needs to wait no longer.
Chico - Never heard of that happening....a likely letter after the ED deadline had passed? Wow. I wouldn't be too worried as they've gone out of process to make sure your son got the LL. They clearly knew what they were doing.
fenwaysouth posted:Chico - Never heard of that happening....a likely letter after the ED deadline had passed? Wow. I wouldn't be too worried as they've gone out of process to make sure your son got the LL. They clearly knew what they were doing.
I was never very worried (maybe less than I should have been). The letter was nice reassurance, although odd because 1) the HC didn't mention during several conversations that LLs were even a possibility at his school. And 2) the fact it came after my son had filed his ED app made me wonder if some other recruit didn't pan out and so the coach had an extra chit to use. Anyhow, we will have an admissions decision on Dec. 15...
This is very exciting! Gunner, Zoom, Chico, others in this boat -- please give us an update when (not if) you receive that golden acceptance letter!! Then get ready to harvest the money tree in your back yard!
Chico Escuela posted:fenwaysouth posted:Chico - Never heard of that happening....a likely letter after the ED deadline had passed? Wow. I wouldn't be too worried as they've gone out of process to make sure your son got the LL. They clearly knew what they were doing.
I was never very worried (maybe less than I should have been). The letter was nice reassurance, although odd because 1) the HC didn't mention during several conversations that LLs were even a possibility at his school. And 2) the fact it came after my son had filed his ED app made me wonder if some other recruit didn't pan out and so the coach had an extra chit to use. Anyhow, we will have an admissions decision on Dec. 15...
Seems pretty standard. They can't issue a LL until AFTER the application has been submitted. In fact, all of these things probably have to occur first:
1. Application submitted by prospective student-athlete
2. Financial aid form submitted as well as given a basic look ensuring all supporting documentation has also been submitted (W2's, 1040's, Schedule C's, etc). And of course the required forms cannot be known until the FA application has been received and given a decent review. Of course if you checked the box "I don't need any money because I'm filthy rich" then this step is unnecessary.
2. EA application deadline has passed. I would imagine it would not be considered proper to send a LL before all ED applications have been received.
You guys have my anxiety kicked in & my kid is a 2022 committed to a school with a minimum required ACT score of 20 😂😂. Best of luck to all of you guys. It has to be stressful.
I think a D3 "likely letter" can be whatever the school wants it to be. My son received one, they called it exactly that, but it was basically a confirmation of the pre-read, before he decided where to apply ED.
I'd note that anxiety is not confined to HA; we've known people who were stressed about getting their ACT scores up to 20, after NLI. The NLI does not mean you're in; it means that if you get in, here's the scholarship.
This is a very long two weeks; good luck to everyone.
I have to admit i also felt like you when son was entering school as we had done everything by the book and had to wait on his admission. It all worked out and he was an above average student but that dark period left me pretty anxious.
I recall a situation soon after son was admitted and in school...a new semester was set to begin and we got hit with a $10k bill and a few days to pay it so that son could attend classes. I think this was his freshman year. We scrambled a bit and got in touch with the right folks in student services and his academic advisor for the team and it went away. We were lucky in that son's academic and baseball money pretty much paid for his 3 years except for some living expenses we funded to keep him on task with grades and classroom performance.
anotherparent posted:I think a D3 "likely letter" can be whatever the school wants it to be. My son received one, they called it exactly that, but it was basically a confirmation of the pre-read, before he decided where to apply ED.
I'd note that anxiety is not confined to HA; we've known people who were stressed about getting their ACT scores up to 20, after NLI. The NLI does not mean you're in; it means that if you get in, here's the scholarship.
This is a very long two weeks; good luck to everyone.
One of my son’s travel teammates didn’t get the required minimum SAT score until the last test available in June after his senior year. This was to a major conference baseball program at a well respected academic institution with a 26% acceptance rate for regular students. The kid flunked out after sophomore year.
This thread has resonated with our household. And to paraphrase Fenway, we too "are glad it's over;" the waiting.
Son's "happy ending" came two days ago when he was accepted ED as a transfer to a HA D3. Sure, he had the HC's word. And yes the HC had even texted him for his uniform sizes for upcoming spring season. And yes, said he had a "slot,” and yes the baseball liaison in admissions said pre-read “looked good.” The whole shooting match. My concern was never the HC's word, it was with the admissions offices of these HA institutions. You just never know what they're gonna do. Never. As others have said, they see the big picture. They're the gate keepers, not the HC. This was quite an adjustment coming from a P5 where the admissions process was a ridiculous formality.
Anecdotally, at the D1 level one might say, "You can never trust these coaches." In HA D3, "You can never trust the admissions office." It ain't over till it's over. There's no substitute for seeing it in writing.
Good luck to any households still waiting. As Gov says, "....to diffuse thoughts think of plan B's. That's not being negative, just practical." That idea helped.
#1 Assistant Coach posted:This thread has resonated with our household. And to paraphrase Fenway, we too "are glad it's over." The waiting.
Son's "happy ending" came two days ago when he was accepted ED as a transfer to a HA D3. Sure, he had the HC's word. And yes the HC had even texted him for his uniform sizes for upcoming spring season. And yes, said he had a "slot,” and yes the baseball liaison in admissions said pre-read “looked good.” The whole shooting match. My concern was never the HC's word, it was with the admissions offices of these HA institutions. You just never know what they're gonna do. Never. As others have said, they see the big picture. They're the gate keepers, not the HC. This was quite an adjustment coming from a P5 where the admissions process was a ridiculous formality.
Anecdotally, at the D1 level one might say, "You can never trust these coaches." In HA D3, "You can never trust the admissions office." It ain't over till it's over. There's no substitute for seeing it in writing.
Good luck to any households still waiting. As Gov says, "....to diffuse thoughts think of plan B's. That's not being negative, just practical." That idea helped.
Congrats! Will he remain at his D1 through the spring? Rehabbing or playing?
JCG: the texted request from HC about uni sizes did prompt a sigh of relief as well, but after that one sigh I put the guard back up!
Not wanting to hijack this informative thread on ED, I’ll chime in elsewhere on son’s experience with labrum surgery, his Medical RS year, his ongoing rehab, and his hopes to pitch in the latter half of 2020 season for his D3 assuming shoulder is where it needs to be. He reports to D3 in January. Moving him out of his D1 school apartment next weekend.
Most HA D3s do not offer mid-year transfers. However a rare few do, with a November 1 application deadline. I’m still a little foggy on the details, but it appears that recruited athlete transfers are “in” with the ED HS recruits.....sort of? But also in their own little weird category, as they’re also with regular students looking to transfer in. Had pre-read, slot, overnight visit, etc. but was clearly in a different “lane” due to being a transfer recruit and not a HS recruit. The seemingly unconventional nature of son’s application path (as a mid-year athlete transfer) did not help my stress level! As it seemed he was walking a trail, that was very overgrown, and had very little foot traffic. The term “bushwhacking” seems appropriate.
Thanks for the well wishes JCG.
Wow, sounds like quite a saga!
#1 Assistant Coach posted:JCG: the texted request from HC about uni sizes did prompt a sigh of relief as well, but after that one sigh I put the guard back up!
Not wanting to hijack this informative thread on ED, I’ll chime in elsewhere on son’s experience with labrum surgery, his Medical RS year, his ongoing rehab, and his hopes to pitch in the latter half of 2020 season for his D3 assuming shoulder is where it needs to be. He reports to D3 in January. Moving him out of his P5 apartment next weekend.
Most HA D3s do not offer mid-year transfers. However a rare few do, with a November 1 application deadline. I’m still a little foggy on the details, but it appears that recruited athlete transfers are “in” with the ED HS recruits.....sort of? But also in their own little weird category, as they’re also with regular students looking to transfer in. Had pre-read, slot, overnight visit, etc. but was clearly in a different “lane” due to being a transfer recruit and not a HS recruit. The seemingly unconventional nature of son’s application path (as a mid-year athlete transfer) did not help my stress level! As it seemed he was walking a trail, that was very overgrown, and had very little foot traffic. The term “bushwhacking” seems appropriate.
Thanks for the well wishes JCG.
What was the academic requirement? 3.75? No Bs? That HA D3 is one of the top in the country!!
Good luck to S!
Gov posted:#1 Assistant Coach posted:JCG: the texted request from HC about uni sizes did prompt a sigh of relief as well, but after that one sigh I put the guard back up!
Not wanting to hijack this informative thread on ED, I’ll chime in elsewhere on son’s experience with labrum surgery, his Medical RS year, his ongoing rehab, and his hopes to pitch in the latter half of 2020 season for his D3 assuming shoulder is where it needs to be. He reports to D3 in January. Moving him out of his P5 apartment next weekend.
Most HA D3s do not offer mid-year transfers. However a rare few do, with a November 1 application deadline. I’m still a little foggy on the details, but it appears that recruited athlete transfers are “in” with the ED HS recruits.....sort of? But also in their own little weird category, as they’re also with regular students looking to transfer in. Had pre-read, slot, overnight visit, etc. but was clearly in a different “lane” due to being a transfer recruit and not a HS recruit. The seemingly unconventional nature of son’s application path (as a mid-year athlete transfer) did not help my stress level! As it seemed he was walking a trail, that was very overgrown, and had very little foot traffic. The term “bushwhacking” seems appropriate.
Thanks for the well wishes JCG.
What was the academic requirement? 3.75? No Bs? That HA D3 is one of the top in the country!!
Good luck to S!
Gov,
Good questions. There is no "book" that we found on transferring to a HA. That was part of the bushwhacking son had to do. Can't comment on what the academic reqs were for a mid-year RS Freshman/academic sophomore transfer as son had no time to research it. He told D1 HC he was transferring on Monday, October 28 and deadline for transfer applications for January 2020 enrollment was November 1st, just 4-days later. Son had FOUR-DAYS to find a new home and submit an application by November 1 deadline. Otherwise he'd be twiddling his thumbs another season, and there was no way he was going to do that again!
Again, I probably should post a thread on the mid-year transfer journey to HA D3s. From the day he told HC he was transferring, to the day he was accepted at D3, was 38-days. Felt like 38-years.
Gunner,
Kudos to you for starting this thread as it was just what I needed to read. Got some great advice here about dealing with the waiting time for the ED notification. From what I've read here, I believe your son will be fine. I say that because it sounds like his academic #s are in line pretty much with what school wants from regular students? Your gut is probably right. But I'll be crossing my fingers until you guys get the news you want!
Gunner,
Kudos to you for starting this thread as it was just what I needed to read. Got some great advice here about dealing with the waiting time for the ED notification. From what I've read here, I believe your son will be fine. I say that because it sounds like his academic #s are in line pretty much with what school wants from regular students? Your gut is probably right. But I'll be crossing my fingers until you guys get the news you want!
I hope we hear by this time next week.... and yes he is in line with admission standards for regular students. The admission office told us 12/20 notification but that has to be EA not ED because others have said ED notifications come out on 12/13 or 12/16.... I will certainly post to the thread when we hear.
Dirtbag30 posted:Smoke's courage has inspired me to share. Couldn't get the neon green chair past security, though.
Ouch!
Got our official confirmation this morning! good luck all.
Thought a little dated, I found this NYT article on the "unpredictable" and "mystifying" world of HA D3 recruiting to be very interesting, as Haverford College gave them behind the scenes access to the process. Also, Haverford's baseball HC mentioned in the article (Beccaria) is still there.
Dirtbag30 posted:Thought a little dated, I found this NYT article on the "unpredictable" and "mystifying" world of HA D3 recruiting to be very interesting, as Haverford College gave them behind the scenes access to the process. Also, Haverford's baseball coach is still there.
That's a good article (I had seen it somewhere before--maybe on this site?). But most of the students profiled have SAT scores that would be below the current 25th percentile at the schools discussed. Granted, scores were almost certainly lower in 2006, but I have to wonder if the author failed to mention that the athletes he is discussing were warned that they were at some risk of not getting in?
My son is supposed to get word on his ED application tomorrow, so maybe I'm whistling past the graveyard...
Every time I see someone post in this thread, I get excited! Tomorrow it will be lit up with great news!! I can feel it! Best wishes to everyone!!
Fingers crossed and hopeful to all of you waiting on the ED results.
Cheers
Just don’t torture yourself by going on to the College Confidential forums and hitting refresh every 30 seconds to see if others got their notice.
Nah, I never did that...
Chico Escuela posted:Dirtbag30 posted:Thought a little dated, I found this NYT article on the "unpredictable" and "mystifying" world of HA D3 recruiting to be very interesting, as Haverford College gave them behind the scenes access to the process. Also, Haverford's baseball coach is still there.
That's a good article (I had seen it somewhere before--maybe on this site?). But most of the students profiled have SAT scores that would be below the current 25th percentile at the schools discussed. Granted, scores were almost certainly lower in 2006, but I have to wonder if the author failed to mention that the athletes he is discussing were warned that they were at some risk of not getting in?
My son is supposed to get word on his ED application tomorrow, so maybe I'm whistling past the graveyard...
I noticed that too. Most of the examples in the article had SATs that seemed on the low side. And, being riddled with anxiety, I began to feel some comfort for my son ... before remembering the rejection pool contains plenty with higher scores, as well.
Any port in a storm!!
My son still waiting. Next week. Torture.....
CTbballDad posted:Just don’t torture yourself by going on to the College Confidential forums and hitting refresh every 30 seconds to see if others got their notice.
Nah, I never did that...
I really like all the posts on there that fit this profile: "Perfect ACT/ 4.0 UW/ 5 W ... rejected!!!"
That site is for massochists only!! Errrr ... so I hear.
My son also got his notification this morning. He asked if he had to keep going to high school.
That NYT article from 2006 was a great read and still applies today, maybe even more so with admissions to selective colleges arguably being much more competitive now.
Which makes me wonder why more HA schools don't issue likely letters to their recruits because that would significantly reduce a lot of anxiety and uncertainty in the process. These schools should have all the information they need (transcripts, test scores, coach ranking) during the pre-read process to decide whether to grant a likely letter or not, and even if they want to first see the fully completed application with essays, they still have time to issue a likely letter after the EA/ED submission.
Although the schools might want to see how their non-athlete EA/ED applicant pool looks like for comparison, they know they need to fill X% of their class with recruited athletes to fill their teams so comparing the athlete pool to the non-athlete pool doesn't seem that useful anyway. Would love to hear what others on board think about why all HA schools don't give likely letters if they care about maximizing their recruiting classes and reducing the randomness of the process for both sides, the college and the student athlete.
My son did get a likely letter. It was nice as a way to reduce anxiety, I guess. But the letter came a couple of weeks after the ED deadline, so it couldn't serve as any kind of inducement to choose the school he applied to. The most I can say is that instead of only waiting a full six weeks to get a decision, my son got some encouragement two weeks after the ED deadline, and then had to wait for a decision. It was good to get the letter--but it would have been a lot nicer to get it a few weeks before the ED deadline.
I'm wondering now if I have been too confident (although it meant I slept better). But my assumption was always that if an athlete applying to a HA D3 was in the top quartile for grades and test scores, he would be accepted if he had a coach's tip (unless something weird happened). I know these schools turn down many kids with great grades and scores; but I assumed (maybe incorrectly) that the athletic preference would be decisive for those who are otherwise well-qualified.
Chico, with your son's likely letter, he's in. You have nothing to worry about as long as he doesn't get arrested, kicked out of school, gets a bunch of D's on his report card 1st semester, or posts something obviously inappropriate on social media.
The timing of likely letter after ED deadline may just be related to when he submitted his complete application. The Ivy's issue their likely letters only after the full application has been submitted, if everything is received by admissions early, then likely letter can be issued anytime after October 1.
In any case, the likely letter is an offer of admission contingent on the things mentioned. I think the main reason schools only call it "likely" is because they want to say they have one official date for notification of all students, but the purpose of the likely letter for athletes is to let them know they are accepted so they can let other coaches know their recruiting is done.
K9 posted:My son also got his notification this morning. He asked if he had to keep going to high school.
Congratulations! He does have to graduate; and, depending on the school, his grades may have to be in some particular range. Not a bad idea to ask what that range is - most schools want no Fs or Ds on final transcripts, for example, or they say "no significant drop from the grades you had when you were accepted," which could mean whatever they want. Make sure your son knows what the requirements are, and that he meets them! It will be hard with his senior season of baseball in the spring.
Jr. got his acceptance today! Although my knucklehead teenage son is playing it very cool, I assume has the good sense to be pleased and excited.
Thanks to the HSBaseballWeb community for much advice, commiseration and information over the past couple of years, including via PMs from a number of folks on this thread. The process was long and often strange, but my son is going to a school with terrific academics and a strong D3 baseball program. He ended up at his first-choice school, and I think it will be a good fit for him.
Chico Escuela posted:Jr. got his acceptance today! Although my knucklehead teenage son is playing it very cool, I assume has the good sense to be pleased and excited.
Thanks to the HSBaseballWeb community for much advice, commiseration and information over the past couple of years, including via PMs from a number of folks on this thread. The process was long and often strange, but my son is going to a school with terrific academics and a strong D3 baseball program. He ended up at his first-choice school, and I think it will be a good fit for him.
Great news! Congratulations!! I'm sure its a relief.
Congrats! So glad it worked out for him!
While ED is next week my son just got a very classy unsolicited text from the RC telling him when to go to the portal to see his acceptance. It just further reinforces right coaches and right school. I will be back on next week with formal news. Writing in this blog is therapeutic.
Felicidades a Chico hijo!!
Playing it cool? Did he give you a big “uh huh” or “whatever?”
Regardless, congratulations!
RJM posted:Playing it cool? Did he give you a big “uh huh” or “whatever?”
Regardless, congratulations!
He returned my fist bump. And he did come show me the acceptance when he pulled it up on his phone. So by the standards of a HS boy dealing with his parents, I guess he was over the moon... (I do think he expected to get in, especially since he got a likely letter, so there is that.)
Chico Escuela posted:RJM posted:Playing it cool? Did he give you a big “uh huh” or “whatever?”
Regardless, congratulations!
He returned my fist bump. And he did come show me the acceptance when he pulled it up on his phone. So by the standards of a HS boy dealing with his parents, I guess he was over the moon... (I do think he expected to get in, especially since he got a likely letter, so there is that.)
Congrats to you and your son Chico on that HA acceptance! Is it at a school close enough to where you live so you can catch some games next year?
Ripken Fan posted:Chico Escuela posted:RJM posted:Playing it cool? Did he give you a big “uh huh” or “whatever?”
Regardless, congratulations!
He returned my fist bump. And he did come show me the acceptance when he pulled it up on his phone. So by the standards of a HS boy dealing with his parents, I guess he was over the moon... (I do think he expected to get in, especially since he got a likely letter, so there is that.)
Congrats to you and your son Chico on that HA acceptance! Is it at a school close enough to where you live so you can catch some games next year?
Thanks! Too far to see every game, but the occasional weekend ought to be possible.
Congrats to all. Your kids did great and you provided the environment for them to excel. I am thinking back on my guidance counselor back during the school house days, I recall him telling me the best college is the one you get accepted to.
Chico! Congrats!
Son officially accepted. Wait is over. Let’s go!!!!
Congratulations to all of your players!
Gunner Mack Jr. posted:Son officially accepted. Wait is over. Let’s go!!!!
Very good school Gunner - congratulations. Son's summer travel team used to practice there occasionally a few years ago.
Congrats to Chico and all the others getting their acceptances - tell all your sons the real work begins now.
Gunner Mack Jr. posted:Son officially accepted. Wait is over. Let’s go!!!!
Congrats, Gunner! That's a really cool, interesting school. Hope you get to a lot of games.
Congrats Gunner. I am excited to watch your son's progress. Great school, great program.
Congratulations to your son Gunner! Great news, great thread! Glad the ED waiting game in your household is over!
Congrats Gunner to you and your son! An exciting time for you both--not a bad Christmas gift.
Son just got official acceptance for UChicago. He had likely letter so not too stressful waiting but it’s great knowing he’s now a Maroon!
Congrats to all, hopefully we’ll get a chance to watch our boys play in World Series of whatever division down the road.
Gotta buy winter clothes now, will be a climate change shock from California!
Congrats Zoom! That’s a tough get!
Congratulations to all, what a relief to be done. Wow, Zoom, that really will be a climate change shock - it's 19 degrees in Chicago right now!
Zoom 2020 posted:Son just got official acceptance for UChicago. He had likely letter so not too stressful waiting but it’s great knowing he’s now a Maroon!
Congrats to all, hopefully we’ll get a chance to watch our boys play in World Series of whatever division down the road.
Gotta buy winter clothes now, will be a climate change shock from California!
Congrats! Big get! Lots of youths are impervious to the cold. My eldest is a California boy in Chicago right now. He doesn't own gloves and won't wear his hat because he says it messes up his hair.
Zoom 2020 posted:Son just got official acceptance for UChicago. He had likely letter so not too stressful waiting but it’s great knowing he’s now a Maroon!
Congrats to all, hopefully we’ll get a chance to watch our boys play in World Series of whatever division down the road.
Gotta buy winter clothes now, will be a climate change shock from California!
Congrats! We have a member w a son there now. I’m sure they’ll reach out
Zoom 2020 posted:Son just got official acceptance for UChicago. He had likely letter so not too stressful waiting but it’s great knowing he’s now a Maroon!
Congrats to all, hopefully we’ll get a chance to watch our boys play in World Series of whatever division down the road.
Gotta buy winter clothes now, will be a climate change shock from California!
That's a life (and wardrobe) changing place. Congratulations!!
Congrats on Chicago! Fabulous school!! Bundle up, Cali!!
Zoom - my son was accepted to UChicago today too! We are in New England so not sure how many games we will make it to, but hopefully we will make it to a few, particularly if he gets some time on the mound. Sounds like the program is going in a good direction and hard to beat the academics. Congrats to your son!
bunch of brainiac baseball players around here.