After
taking a couple of weeks off to take a look at WHO the top recruits
are, the Tuesday Tip is back. This week we turn to the Holy Grail
of college swimming – the scholarship, specifically the
“Full Ride.ý At the very least, nearly every parent
has, in the back of their mind, that all of these long weekends
spent at meets, money spent on club dues, travel, goggles, and the
latest new suit, will be worth it when little Betsy Backstroker or
Frankie Freestyler gets an athletic scholarship.
Sorry to burst your bubble mom and dad, but you need to
start making catch-up contributions to your
529 Plan.
Oh, but lets hear it from the coaches themselves:
“Full scholarships are very uncommon.ý
“It is rare.ý
“Very, very rare.ý
“Not real common.ý
Why is this? It is a result of scholarship limits
imposed on teams by the NCAA. Division I programs may award a
maximum of 9.9 men’s and 14.0 women’s swimming
scholarships. Division II programs can provide up to 8.1 for each
gender while Division III institutions may not provide any athletic
aid. Programs that offer the maximum are said to be
“fully-fundedý, but even that is a bit misleading
– slightly more than half of the 135 Division I men’s
programs are fully-funded while nearly two-thirds of the 190
women’s teams are.
With 24-28 athletes on each program, simple arithmetic
will tell you that the “Fullsý are few and far
between. Considering coaches are judged on the performance of their
teams, it’s no surprise that scholarships are awarded on
performance. “The rule of thumb is: the better the team, the
harder it is to get money,ý explains Brigham Young
women’s coach Stan Crump. “Fulls are tough to get, but
easier as the teams get weaker.ý
In the SEC and Big Ten, two of the most elite
conferences, the standards are high.
On the men’s side, “If you are not in the
top 8 at nationals or an outstanding high school short course
swimmer,ý explains Florida’s Gregg Troy, “[a
full] is probably not a reality.ý
Women “need to be a top 8 NCAA corer or very close
talking through the door,ý explains Ohio State’s Bill
Dorrenkott explains, “and even then they need to be able to
contribute significantly on relays.ý
While Coach Troy isn’t known to mince words, but a
rival major-conference coach was even more direct: “We never
give a full scholarship to a high school senior. It’s a
$110,000 gamble on a 18 year-old kid.ý The coach then went
onto explain, “Internationals [foreign athletes] are another
story. They’re older, more experienced and you need to pay
full to get them.ý
They need to be a top 8 NCAA scorer or very close
walking through the door and even then they need to be able to
contribute significantly on relays.ý
Denver’s Brian Schrader also noted the difference
between men and women, but adds that “Recruits who are at an
NCAA qualifying level are offered very substantial amounts of
scholarship money …whether they are male or
female.ý
Dorrenkott broke down the numbers a bit further
explaining that “A good scholarship for US National multiple
event qualifiers is 30-50% for men and 40-60% for women.ý
Not a NCAA qualifier as a freshman? You might be as a sophomore,
and oftentimes coaches will reward those gains. As SMU’s
Eddie Sinnott notes, “At SMU we have a saying “If you
perform for us we will perform for youý and take that very
seriously.ý
Gary Kinkead of Indianapolis, and NC State’s
Brooks Teal echo the team-building concept. Kinkead explains,
““Championships are not won with 1-3 GREAT swimmers,
but with depth and the best way to have depth is to divide up the
available scholarships among those talented athletes that you feel
can produce the greatest number of championship and consolation
finalists.ý
Teal adds that most schools “will NOT use more
than one, perhaps two or three full scholarshipsý on men.
For the women, it’s “very rare, though not unheard of,
to have more than four women on full scholarship on one
squad.ý
Breaking up these scholarships not only benefits the
team, it also create opportunities for swimmers to train and
compete at an elite level. Sinnott explains “Anyone with NCAA
times coming out of high school should expect some full scholarship
offers.ý He adds, however that, “Anyone wanting to go
to a top 10 school or ‘want to be’ school should expect
to pay some of the cost of school in order to have the best
possible team.ý
Hawaii’s Vic Wales, for instance, doesn’t
offer Full Rides. He tends to offer 90-94% “which will cover
all the costs but cuts down on the extra ‘spending
money.ý By holding back a little on each scholarship, Wales
explains, they are able to build a larger, stronger team. Five and
ten percent here and there can “free up that little bit of
money for student-athletes who aren’t quite at that National
level yet.ý
| The average women’s swimming scholarship is
roughly $9,500 while the typical men’s swimming scholarship
is approximately $6,500.
|
The
New York Times’s Bill Pennington published a
series of articles chronicling the scarcity of athletic aid. The
Times found that the average scholarship award for sports other
than football and basketball was just $8,707. In women’s
swimming, the average award is slightly more than that while in
men’s swimming the amount is closer to $6,500. The bottom
line – with spiraling tuition that athletic scholarship might
cover a third of attendance.
The reality is there are more collegiate swimmers receiving no
athletic aid than there are swimmers who are. What about the
experience of participating on an intercollegiate team? What about
the lessons learned from the sport?
Ultimately, the scholarship, rather than being a means to a
college education or justification for the weekends spent at meets
or thousands spent on ‘technical’ suits, can be seen as
icing on the cake. Says Southern Illinois’ Rick Walker:
“It should be an honor to be offered anything at all.
< hr size="8" color="#0000ff" noshade> Have a recruiting
question you’ve always wanted to ask a college coach? E-mail
us. Want to ask a coach in person? Make plans for the latest
CollegeSwimming.com Recruit Seminar set for August 3 in
Minneapolis. Look for registration information next week.