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PostPosted: Wed Jan 08, 2020 11:27 pm 
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man of few opinions wrote:
My daughter is a decent runner and realizes that she is not going to be a D1 or D2 caliber athlete, but is a fantastic student and is looking at some D3 schools where she can compete in XC and track. We haven't gotten deep into the process yet but it appears to us that if you are a top student AND have a passion for a certain sport that some of the smaller schools will definitely offer you some great academic scholarships in an effort to get you to attend and continue your sports career. At the state XC meet this fall it was a sight to see all of these officials from different schools approaching middle- and back-of-the-pack kids about continuing with them. She is definitely motivated to keep her grades up so she can go to one of these schools and keep running competitively.



That is great to hear. To me, this is kind of a throwback to the way student athletes used to happen. I was one of those guys. I was not big enough or good enough to be offered a D-1 scholarship for baseball not smart enough to merit an academic scholarship to an Ivy League or similar school. But I was good enough and smart enough to get offers from smaller schools with good academics and baseball programs. And that scholarship which I accepted helped me and my family get me through college and later graduate school.

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 08, 2020 11:36 pm 
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Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote:
Hussra wrote:
They may not award athletic scholarships per se. But if you're an athlete of some ability + have the requisite academics plenty of DIII schools offer 80%+ scholarships. I kinda thought that was the point of attending a smaller Division III school: ends up being the same price or cheaper than your local in-state uni but greater opportunity to participate in extracurriculars + smaller classes/more individual academic attention.

You can also get those scholarships on academics alone. But, yeah, D-III schools aren't likely to help you out if you're only bringing athletics to the table.


That was my experience. Ultimately, I decided that while it would have been fun to continue the sport, I wasn't going to be a professional and I should move on and focus on what my career goals were at a school more suited to my academic interests.

Put away my childish things as it were.


That is fine if you can AFFORD the cost of an good college education at whatever school that you want to attend. Many kids and their families do not have that luxury. To many, the ability of playing a sport is important to the affordability of the kid receiving a college education. Sometimes, life requires compromises. This includes a college education

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PostPosted: Wed Jan 08, 2020 11:42 pm 
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The Hawk wrote:
Dr. Kenneth Noisewater wrote:
Hussra wrote:
They may not award athletic scholarships per se. But if you're an athlete of some ability + have the requisite academics plenty of DIII schools offer 80%+ scholarships. I kinda thought that was the point of attending a smaller Division III school: ends up being the same price or cheaper than your local in-state uni but greater opportunity to participate in extracurriculars + smaller classes/more individual academic attention.

You can also get those scholarships on academics alone. But, yeah, D-III schools aren't likely to help you out if you're only bringing athletics to the table.


That was my experience. Ultimately, I decided that while it would have been fun to continue the sport, I wasn't going to be a professional and I should move on and focus on what my career goals were at a school more suited to my academic interests.

Put away my childish things as it were.


That is fine if you can AFFORD the cost of an good college education at whatever school that you want to attend. Many kids and their families do not have that luxury. To many, the ability of playing a sport is important to the affordability of the kid receiving a college education. Sometimes, life requires compromises. This includes a college education


I absolutely couldn't afford it. Worked a 72-hour/week summer job and college work-study job, borrowed my ass off, but it was worth it. Family farming in the '80s wasn't a particularly profitable endeavor.

The cost of the state school and the scholarship cost of the small school were the same. The state school had a much better academic program.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 12:51 am 
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I used to coach with a guy that previous coached at U of C. Their biggest problem in recruiting was how many of the kids they helped get in due to football wouldn't even show up to play in August.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 8:10 am 
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The Hawk wrote:
That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.
Why are you lumping together DII and DIII? There is a massive difference between the two of them.

I don't believe you about playing for a small DII school that had a winning record against Purdue. Now, it's possible they did lose to D2 schools, but the odds that you happened to play on a team that was consistently playing them and beating them more than you lost is pretty remarkably low. If you want to say what school you played for then I can check into it further and see. College baseball records are pretty poor for the 1960s though.


The Hawk wrote:
In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.
Most of those schools are begging kids to play there. It is basically a club sport.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 8:20 am 
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I have found the game results for all games played by Purdue in the 1960s. Unless The Hawk played for Indiana Central(which is now the University of Indianapolis) during a very specific time period he seems to be full of it.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 8:33 am 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
I have found the game results for all games played by Purdue in the 1960s. Unless The Hawk played for Indiana Central(which is now the University of Indianapolis) during a very specific time period he seems to be full of it.


Purdue wins again!

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 9:23 am 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
I have found the game results for all games played by Purdue in the 1960s. Unless The Hawk played for Indiana Central(which is now the University of Indianapolis) during a very specific time period he seems to be full of it.


wow more stolen valor
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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 10:04 am 
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The Hawk wrote:
I was...not smart enough to merit an academic scholarship to an Ivy League or similar school.
Shocking.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 10:10 am 
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I'd like to see some data or analysis as to what playing DIII sports accomplishes or not before wildly asserting something with no basis.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 10:27 am 
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My oldest step-daughter went to DIII school Whittenberg in Ohio to play field hockey. No delusions of anything....just what she wanted to do. After 2 years, she siaid "I'm over this whole athlete thing and quit. Finished out just being a typical college student. As was already stated....any assistance she get was based on academics and cost rounded out to being state school comparable.

Nice campus....like most other college towns, leave the campus and it's kind of a run-down shit hole.

I've always maintained that you're always better off going to a bigger State school that at least people have heard of. Can't be good for an employer to review a resume and think "where in the hell is this school"? Doesn't mean it's a bad school. Just....what's the path of least resistance.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 2:42 pm 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.
Why are you lumping together DII and DIII? There is a massive difference between the two of them.

I don't believe you about playing for a small DII school that had a winning record against Purdue. Now, it's possible they did lose to D2 schools, but the odds that you happened to play on a team that was consistently playing them and beating them more than you lost is pretty remarkably low. If you want to say what school you played for then I can check into it further and see. College baseball records are pretty poor for the 1960s though.


The Hawk wrote:
In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.
Most of those schools are begging kids to play there. It is basically a club sport.


WE played Purdue quite a bit in what you might call pre-season games. They were just a short distance from my school. And our "games' were pretty competitive. Our official "season" with them only included one game. What was terrific fun for me is that two guys I played high school with played for Purdue for a few years. They were Hank Suerth 1B and P and Frank Ganzer SS. We'd get together after the games at some bars outside Purdue. Purdue back then didn't have a very good baseball program but was a big D1 school and our coach loved the competition.

Our conference which was then called the ICC(Indiana Collegiate Conference) did have a decent record against Purdue. When I played, the conference had Ball State, Butler, Valparaiso, Evansville and Indiana State in it which were much bigger schools. I was actually offered a scholarship to Butler but decided that I'd get a better chance to play at St. Joes. It was a pretty good little athletic conference back then with the bigger schools leaving sometime in the late 70's or so.

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Last edited by The Hawk on Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:18 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 2:46 pm 
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We can't bust heads like we used to, but we have our ways. One trick is to tell 'em stories that don't go anywhere - like the time I caught the ferry over to Shelbyville. I needed a new heel for my shoe, so, I decided to go to Morganville, which is what they called Shelbyville in those days. So I tied an onion to my belt, which was the style at the time. Now, to take the ferry cost a nickel, and in those days, nickels had pictures of bumblebees on 'em. Give me five bees for a quarter, you'd say.


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 2:48 pm 
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wdelaney72 wrote:
My oldest step-daughter went to DIII school Whittenberg in Ohio to play field hockey. No delusions of anything....just what she wanted to do. After 2 years, she siaid "I'm over this whole athlete thing and quit. Finished out just being a typical college student. As was already stated....any assistance she get was based on academics and cost rounded out to being state school comparable.

Nice campus....like most other college towns, leave the campus and it's kind of a run-down shit hole.

I've always maintained that you're always better off going to a bigger State school that at least people have heard of. Can't be good for an employer to review a resume and think "where in the hell is this school"? Doesn't mean it's a bad school. Just....what's the path of least resistance.


That's your opinion and you are entitled to it. My experience is different. As a person, though, who has hired many many people, the size of the school doesn't really mean shit in terms of the education that they get.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 2:51 pm 
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The Hawk wrote:
My experience is different.
Especially when you lie about it.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 2:53 pm 
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The Hawk wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.
Why are you lumping together DII and DIII? There is a massive difference between the two of them.

I don't believe you about playing for a small DII school that had a winning record against Purdue. Now, it's possible they did lose to D2 schools, but the odds that you happened to play on a team that was consistently playing them and beating them more than you lost is pretty remarkably low. If you want to say what school you played for then I can check into it further and see. College baseball records are pretty poor for the 1960s though.


The Hawk wrote:
In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.
Most of those schools are begging kids to play there. It is basically a club sport.


WE played Purdue quite a bit in what you might call pre-season games. They were just a short distance from my school. And our "games' were pretty competitive. Our official "season" with them only included one game. What was terrific fun for me is that two guys I played high school with played for Purdue for a few years. They were Hank Suerth 1B and Frank Ganzer SS. We'd get together after the games at some bars outside Purdue. Purdue back then didn't have a very good baseball program but was a big D1 school and our coach loved the competition.

Our conference which was then called the ICC(Indiana Collegiate Conference) did have a decent record against Purdue. When I played, the conference had Ball State, Butler, Valparaiso, and Indiana State in it which were much bigger schools. I was actually offered a scholarship to Butler but decided that I'd get a better chance to play at St. Joes. It was a pretty good little athletic conference back then with the bigger schools leaving sometime in the late 70's or so.

So you were talking about exhibition games?

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 3:22 pm 
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I had a few extended family who went to SJC. I spent a lot of happy days at that place as a kid.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 3:29 pm 
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I don't know how it works in other sports, but in hockey D3 is much more competitive and talented than D2. There's only a handful of D2 hockey teams left in the country. D3 is huge though, especially in New England area.

My brother played D3 hockey at Oswego State in New York. He was good enough for D1, but got screwed over by his prep school coach, who took over his senior year and spent the year hyping up the freshman he recruited rather than helping the seniors get recruited to college. So he ended up at Oswego where he played full minutes from day 1 and had a great 4 year career. After college, he went to a free agent camp and parlayed that into a 4 year pro career that ended with him turning down an invite to try out for the Wolves in favor of hanging them up and going to law school (dumb decision).

To compare D3 to club is pretty asinine, at least in hockey. Club hockey players are guys who were ok players at the Illinois high school level. No one at club level would even get a look at a D3 school.

Nowadays D3 has gotten so competitive that guys like my brother don't even get looks. Most of the good teams recruit most of their players from Canadian juniors. Oswego has become a national power and their team is almost all Canadian. When my brother went there it was 100% american kids.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 3:44 pm 
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good dolphin wrote:
I had a few extended family who went to SJC. I spent a lot of happy days at that place as a kid.



The Hawk, did you play with my neighbor, Bobby Feltz at St. Joe? He was a good pitcher at Notre Dame High school and best friends with Luzinski.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:22 pm 
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Baseball as well as hockey Shakes you can be the rare lottery winner and make it. Couple other odd sports. Look at Trtion College there.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:24 pm 
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The Hawk wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
There really is no good reason to be a DIII athlete unless you happen to choose a school that is DIII and you want to participate in it like you would a club sport.

That isn't to disrespect the small school experience but if you would otherwise choose a different school but are going to a lower choice because they give you a chance to play a sport in front of crowds smaller than an average high school then you shouldn't.


That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.

In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.


Indeed.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:33 pm 
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shakes wrote:
I don't know how it works in other sports, but in hockey D3 is much more competitive and talented than D2. There's only a handful of D2 hockey teams left in the country. D3 is huge though, especially in New England area.

My brother played D3 hockey at Oswego State in New York. He was good enough for D1, but got screwed over by his prep school coach, who took over his senior year and spent the year hyping up the freshman he recruited rather than helping the seniors get recruited to college. So he ended up at Oswego where he played full minutes from day 1 and had a great 4 year career. After college, he went to a free agent camp and parlayed that into a 4 year pro career that ended with him turning down an invite to try out for the Wolves in favor of hanging them up and going to law school (dumb decision).

To compare D3 to club is pretty asinine, at least in hockey. Club hockey players are guys who were ok players at the Illinois high school level. No one at club level would even get a look at a D3 school.

Nowadays D3 has gotten so competitive that guys like my brother don't even get looks. Most of the good teams recruit most of their players from Canadian juniors. Oswego has become a national power and their team is almost all Canadian. When my brother went there it was 100% american kids.

Hockey is a little different because it was basically ignored by the big conferences. The Big Ten didn't even have hockey until 2014 though some schools had teams but most of them were in states that bordered Canada.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:35 pm 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Big Ten didn't even have hockey until 2014 though some schools had teams but most of them were in states that bordered Canada.


I didn't even know the Big Ten had hockey. I thought Minnesota, Michigan State, and Wisconsin played in that league with UIC and Michigan Tech and some others.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 4:39 pm 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Big Ten didn't even have hockey until 2014 though some schools had teams but most of them were in states that bordered Canada.


I didn't even know the Big Ten had hockey. I thought Minnesota, Michigan State, and Wisconsin played in that league with UIC and Michigan Tech and some others.

They do. They want at least one of the Indiana/Illinois schools to do it but no one can come up with the $50 million from a rich donor to get it done.

Notre Dame is also a Big Ten hockey member.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 5:06 pm 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Big Ten didn't even have hockey until 2014 though some schools had teams but most of them were in states that bordered Canada.


I didn't even know the Big Ten had hockey. I thought Minnesota, Michigan State, and Wisconsin played in that league with UIC and Michigan Tech and some others.

They do. They want at least one of the Indiana/Illinois schools to do it but no one can come up with the $50 million from a rich donor to get it done.

Notre Dame is also a Big Ten hockey member.


Yeah every few years you see an article about it.. got a bit of a push after penn state built an arena for it a few years back. I remember buying a t shirt from the club team years ago when I was a freshman..


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:20 pm 
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Frank Coztansa wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
My experience is different.
Especially when you lie about it.


I sure as shit didn't lie, dickhead.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:25 pm 
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Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
Boilermaker Rick wrote:
The Hawk wrote:
That to me is crap. You do disrespect whatever you think is the "small school experience". You also do not anyway understand the joy of playing a sport at a college level. I know quite a bit about DII and DIII athletics. You obviously do not. BY your board name I guess that you went to Purdue University. I played for a small DII level school in baseball and we beat them more than we lost to them back when I played. And the same things apply right now where some good DIII and DII teams do beat DI schools on occasions.
Why are you lumping together DII and DIII? There is a massive difference between the two of them.

I don't believe you about playing for a small DII school that had a winning record against Purdue. Now, it's possible they did lose to D2 schools, but the odds that you happened to play on a team that was consistently playing them and beating them more than you lost is pretty remarkably low. If you want to say what school you played for then I can check into it further and see. College baseball records are pretty poor for the 1960s though.


The Hawk wrote:
In other words, your an idiot for somehow categorizing DIII athletics as a "club sport". It is far from a club sport. A lot of these schools have good quality athletic programs that good athletes participate in.
Most of those schools are begging kids to play there. It is basically a club sport.


WE played Purdue quite a bit in what you might call pre-season games. They were just a short distance from my school. And our "games' were pretty competitive. Our official "season" with them only included one game. What was terrific fun for me is that two guys I played high school with played for Purdue for a few years. They were Hank Suerth 1B and Frank Ganzer SS. We'd get together after the games at some bars outside Purdue. Purdue back then didn't have a very good baseball program but was a big D1 school and our coach loved the competition.

Our conference which was then called the ICC(Indiana Collegiate Conference) did have a decent record against Purdue. When I played, the conference had Ball State, Butler, Valparaiso, and Indiana State in it which were much bigger schools. I was actually offered a scholarship to Butler but decided that I'd get a better chance to play at St. Joes. It was a pretty good little athletic conference back then with the bigger schools leaving sometime in the late 70's or so.

So you were talking about exhibition games?


We played several Big Ten schools as well as Missouri Valley team as well as Northern Illinois and Southern Illinois. Most of these larger schools scheduled the teams in our conference as warm type games before their league season started. But with Purdue, we played scrimmages all of the time like I said.

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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:30 pm 
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shakes wrote:
I don't know how it works in other sports, but in hockey D3 is much more competitive and talented than D2. There's only a handful of D2 hockey teams left in the country. D3 is huge though, especially in New England area.

My brother played D3 hockey at Oswego State in New York. He was good enough for D1, but got screwed over by his prep school coach, who took over his senior year and spent the year hyping up the freshman he recruited rather than helping the seniors get recruited to college. So he ended up at Oswego where he played full minutes from day 1 and had a great 4 year career. After college, he went to a free agent camp and parlayed that into a 4 year pro career that ended with him turning down an invite to try out for the Wolves in favor of hanging them up and going to law school (dumb decision).

To compare D3 to club is pretty asinine, at least in hockey. Club hockey players are guys who were ok players at the Illinois high school level. No one at club level would even get a look at a D3 school.

Nowadays D3 has gotten so competitive that guys like my brother don't even get looks. Most of the good teams recruit most of their players from Canadian juniors. Oswego has become a national power and their team is almost all Canadian. When my brother went there it was 100% american kids.



That is true. It is asinine. My son played highly rated high school and club soccer and there were quite a few very good high school players who went to DII and DIII schools. And in baseball, it is the same. I had a kid who played for me both in high school and travel ball that went the JC route(which also BTW has quite a few really good teams in it) and then got a ride to Azusa Pacific. He ended up getting drafted by the Atlanta Braves and played both for their minor league teams as well as later for the Oakland A's.

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An Ode to the Texas man who shot an Antifa terrorist:

Oh, he might have went on livin'
But he made one fatal slip
When he tried to match the Ranger
With the big iron on his hip


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:34 pm 
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Joe Orr Road Rod wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
I had a few extended family who went to SJC. I spent a lot of happy days at that place as a kid.



The Hawk, did you play with my neighbor, Bobby Feltz at St. Joe? He was a good pitcher at Notre Dame High school and best friends with Luzinski.


He wasn't at Joe's when I was there. What year was he there?

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An Ode to the Texas man who shot an Antifa terrorist:

Oh, he might have went on livin'
But he made one fatal slip
When he tried to match the Ranger
With the big iron on his hip


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PostPosted: Thu Jan 09, 2020 6:39 pm 
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pittmike wrote:
Baseball as well as hockey Shakes you can be the rare lottery winner and make it. Couple other odd sports. Look at Trtion College there.


Yeah. I used to tell high school kids all of the time to play their asses off because you never know who is in the stands watching you. This includes scouts for colleges and universities. That was the way it was ages ago also when I played only now with the advent of technology kids can send game film of themselves to the colleges and universities that they might like to go and there are know large scouting organizations that act as recruiting agents for colleges and universities. Parent have to be aware, though, that some of these companies are pretty much only in it for the money they charge for their services.

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An Ode to the Texas man who shot an Antifa terrorist:

Oh, he might have went on livin'
But he made one fatal slip
When he tried to match the Ranger
With the big iron on his hip


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