Thursday, December 3, 2009

College suggestions?

I was thinking about acollegeto go to for basketball I would like suggestions.Preferably in Illinois. I dont want it to be hard to make the bball team.



College suggestions?baseball





If you have to ask that means thecollegescouts are not already recruiting you. And that means it won't matter where you go because you're probably not going to make the team as a walk-on except at the smallest Division 3 or NAIA schools. So: if playing at sports is not going to have any career value for you (and even if you were a top prospect this would unfortunately likely be the case,) the best thing to do is start at your local communitycollegebecause it will be dirt cheap and you can maybe get some basic required courses out of the way in a non-threatening environment and then decide if you want to continue toward a 4-year degree. If you just want to play hoops for the fun of it, great. If you can get some good coaching and develop a game maybe you can hook on at some small school somewhere but don't count on doing anything more than that. If you haven't already established yourself as a big-time recruit by the time you're 14 or 15 years old it's just not going to happen. Sorry but that's just the way it is.



College suggestions?nba playoff schedule ,nba teams



It really depends on how good of a high school player you are. If your an exceptional player I would have to say Arizona, North Carolina, Duke, or Kansas (to name a few). If your a good player I would try to stay closer to home, some of the places I would suggest would be Depaul, Illinois, Illinois St., Northwestern, University of Chicago, Loyola, and Butler. If your just above average I would look at schools close to home in the Horizon League -- Valparaiso, Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Wright State, Detroit, Cleavland State, and Youngstown state. Otherwise I would suggest on attending juniorcollegefor a couple of years, developing your skills and then transferring to one of the above schools your sophomore or junior year.



A lot of this has to do with your ability as a high school athlete and what each school as to offer for you: Scholarships, location, prestige, and each schools individual academic program... the first four all have great basketball teams and academic programs.
Don't choose a school based on the b-ball team. Choose it on the overall quality of education. Check out the Princeton review and pick something in the top 50.



If all you want is acollegewith an easy team to get on choose a communitycollegenearby that has a b-ball team.

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