First-time poster here...
Since the NCAA announced in the spring an allowance for seniors to stay on for another spring season - and I have read that it applies to all spring athletes enrolled in college last year too, not just seniors - as well as the freeing of eligibility out of the transfer portal and the increasing of roster sizes, our household has talked about the "trickle-down effect" that it will have on college rosters and therefore current high school players. Namely, because P5s are going to have flooded rosters, some of their current juniors or seniors who were hoping for more playing time are going to see the writing on the wall and transfer this year to mid-majors, where they might be studs. That will force mid-major athletes in the same situation to jump to some lower-D1s and perhaps D2s. The D2 juniors and seniors who were hoping to see increased PT this year would therefore hop to JUCO or some D3s, etc. Basically, the talent level would rise at every division, especially because it's inevitable that some schools will cut baseball for pandemic cost-saving, forcing even more transfers. The end result, of course, is that it's going to be a tough few years to try to get recruited out of high school. The NJCAA decision last week might actually mitigate some of this trickling-down across the board because a lot of those players would move "laterally" to JUCO and wait it out for a year or two, rather than down the chain, but it's still very logical that things will proceed in this way.
Hence, my question: do some of you more seasoned minds out there (BTW, this is my first time through this process) think that the Ivies might be immune to this trickle-down impact? I came up with two potential reasons why myself:
1) the high academics might preclude a lot of players from transferring in, or
2) a lesser number of seniors might stay on for a 5th year, having grad school or professional non-baseball opportunities already lined up after college.
On the other hand, athletes in their first year of grad school AT an Ivy are now eligible to play too, which might work as a counterweight.
For the sake of transparency, why I care is that my son is a 2022 trying to get recruited by an Ivy.
What are your thoughts?