TCU recruits really well and get kids on campus....do they benefit from being a private school and have the ability to suppliment baseball scholarships with academic scholarships, similarly to Rice/Vandy/Miami?
As I understand it, Rice, Vandy, and Stanford are on a different level from everyone else because every student that attends those schools pays based upon financial need, so, in effect, the vast majority of students at these schools are on scholarshp. If a baseball player can get in to these schools (harder than most places), they will, in many cases, have a cost of attendance similar to what they would see if they were on a partial baseball scholarship at another school. That's not enough to get the stars, but it frees up some scholarship money that they can use to sign the top kids, and thereby offer them a larger scholarship.AgRyan04 said:
TCU recruits really well and get kids on campus....do they benefit from being a private school and have the ability to suppliment baseball scholarships with academic scholarships, similarly to Rice/Vandy/Miami?
FIFYQuote:
What is frustrating is that kids don't recognize that cost factor, and they look at it more as a matter of respect--if TCU offers you 50% and A&M 25%, a lot of kids will take the TCU offer even though it will end up costing their parents more.
This kind of program helps equivalency (partial scholarship) sports, but it only goes so far. Take track, for instance, as compared to baseball. The demographic for track parents is, I'd be willing to bet, much poorer than for kids that are college baseball prospects since baseball is rather expensive to play at the youth level (at least as most kids do it nowadays). So, that academic scholarship may not be enough to entice track kids to Rice, unless it covers everything.Quote:
The new Rice scholarship program is probably the most interesting private school program. But I'm still skeptical it'll prove to be a boon for their athletic programs.
TXAggie2011 said:
Generally speaking, any school does not have to count towards a sport's scholarship limit which are granted to an athlete without any regard to athletic ability AND the athlete does not receive any other support that is based on athletic ability.
So, you cannot "supplement" athletic scholarships with academic scholarships to get around the scholarship limits.
There are about 6 or so exceptions. Most of them actually are public school specific, and not available to private schools.
twk said:As I understand it, Rice, Vandy, and Stanford are on a different level from everyone else because every student that attends those schools pays based upon financial need, so, in effect, the vast majority of students at these schools are on scholarshp. If a baseball player can get in to these schools (harder than most places), they will, in many cases, have a cost of attendance similar to what they would see if they were on a partial baseball scholarship at another school. That's not enough to get the stars, but it frees up some scholarship money that they can use to sign the top kids, and thereby offer them a larger scholarship.AgRyan04 said:
TCU recruits really well and get kids on campus....do they benefit from being a private school and have the ability to suppliment baseball scholarships with academic scholarships, similarly to Rice/Vandy/Miami?
Do schools like TCU and Baylor have some leeway that A&M doesn't? Perhpas, but it's largely overcome by the increased cost. What is frustrating is that kids don't recognize that cost factor, and they look at it more as a matter of respect--if TCU offers you 50% and A&M 25%, a lot of kids will take the TCU offer even though it will end up costing them more.
cb1919 said:
I think these supposed benefits of private schools is largely exaggerated. If they do have an advantage, it doesn't show on the field.
27/39 teams (last 19 years) who played in the CWS were public schools
7/10 schools with the most wins all time in Omaha are public
17/25 in the D1 Baseball top 25 are public
swimmerbabe11 said:twk said:As I understand it, Rice, Vandy, and Stanford are on a different level from everyone else because every student that attends those schools pays based upon financial need, so, in effect, the vast majority of students at these schools are on scholarshp. If a baseball player can get in to these schools (harder than most places), they will, in many cases, have a cost of attendance similar to what they would see if they were on a partial baseball scholarship at another school. That's not enough to get the stars, but it frees up some scholarship money that they can use to sign the top kids, and thereby offer them a larger scholarship.AgRyan04 said:
TCU recruits really well and get kids on campus....do they benefit from being a private school and have the ability to suppliment baseball scholarships with academic scholarships, similarly to Rice/Vandy/Miami?
Do schools like TCU and Baylor have some leeway that A&M doesn't? Perhpas, but it's largely overcome by the increased cost. What is frustrating is that kids don't recognize that cost factor, and they look at it more as a matter of respect--if TCU offers you 50% and A&M 25%, a lot of kids will take the TCU offer even though it will end up costing them more.
This is better said than I could have explained. Although, alums are told all the time that we are working to move towards a Vandy formula...which I think would be incredible (not just for sports)
In a lot of ways, we have a bigger challenge in recruiting because of the difference in tuition expense.
I have no idea how things like the Micah Ahearn Scholly factor into that though.
swimmerbabe11 said:
That's why they are constantly asking me for money
(1) That's not all the private schools playing baseball in your "power four" conferences. You even missed one that's really good at baseball.Quote:
Your conclusions are severely flawed for a couple of reasons but primarily because of the difference between the number of public versus private schools there are chasing those Omaha spots. Look at the four major conferences in baseball. The only private schools are Vanderbilt, TCU, Baylor, Miami, BC, Syracuse, Duke, Wake and Southern Cal. Of those BC, Syracuse and Wake don't even try to be good Duke only started trying recently. all of the others have been there at least once during that span.
The private school advantage only arose in 1999 when the NCAA started allowing non-athletic scholarships to first year players. Prior to that a player had to be on campus a year before he could get academic money.

PhatMack19 said:
How will Rice's free tuition deal work when it's implemented this fall?
Families that make under $130k a get 100%
From $130k-$200k they get at least 50%
Their program is about to really take off again if they can go get the best players in the state whose parents make under $200k and give them full rides.
Only the families making under $130k get the free ride. If a player's family makes more than $130k, he'd have to choose between the academic scholarship and a baseball scholarship. Let me give you an example of how that might work.PhatMack19 said:
How will Rice's free tuition deal work when it's implemented this fall?
Families that make under $130k a get 100%
From $130k-$200k they get at least 50%
Their program is about to really take off again if they can go get the best players in the state whose parents make under $200k and give them full rides.
twk said:Only the families making under $130k get the free ride. If a player's family makes more than $130k, he'd have to choose between the academic scholarship and a baseball scholarship. Let me give you an example of how that might work.PhatMack19 said:
How will Rice's free tuition deal work when it's implemented this fall?
Families that make under $130k a get 100%
From $130k-$200k they get at least 50%
Their program is about to really take off again if they can go get the best players in the state whose parents make under $200k and give them full rides.
From what I've read and heard elsewhere, it seems that stud pitchers are getting 80% to 90% offers as freshmen, while hitters either have to walk or on take the minimum 25% their first year (with the promise that they will get more in subsequent years--if they pan out). Let's take two players, a pitcher and a position player, whose families both have $200k in income.
The position player may be enticed to attend Rice with, say, a 50% academic scholarship, even though his parents will still be paying a chunk out of pocket (or he will be taking loans) because he'd either be a walk on or get the minimum his first year at A&M (and still pay less). The pitcher, on the other hand, will require Rice to offer him a baseball scholarship of 90%, or a full ride, in order to turn down the A&M offer of 80%. Because Rice has got some key position players on academic scholarship instead of taking any baseball money, they can probably offer a larger percentage to the pitcher, maybe even a full ride.
Now, a financially savvy family will crunch the numbers and still see A&M's offers as being competitive with Rice, but a lot of players are swayed by that percentage. 90% or a "full ride" at Rice is going to beat 80% from A&M for a lot of kids, because it tells them Rice values them more than A&M.
I'm not. Full ride is rare (maybe unheard of) at A&M, but we do have some pitchers way up there on scholarship percentage. I was surprised when I heard that recently, but I've heard it from more than one source, and it is apparently not unique to A&M. Pitchers get big offers while hitters have to settle for the crumbs. That seems to be the way it is everywhere,Quote:
I don't know if you're lumping in scholarship from the new program but, if you aren't, 90% or full ride baseball scholarships aren't a thing
Its unfortunate that people starred up the response early in the thread that answered the OP's question with "yes."Quote:
Also, you can't add an academic scholarship on top of a baseball scholarship, in most cases (there are some exceptions, but they don't apply at A&M, or the private schools). If you receive a baseball scholarship, every dollar that you receive, from any source, counts against the 11.7. So, it's an either or situation. Either you are on a baseball scholarship, or you're on an academic scholarship, but you can't be both.
TXAggie2011 said:(1) That's not all the private schools playing baseball in your "power four" conferences. You even missed one that's really good at baseball.Quote:
Your conclusions are severely flawed for a couple of reasons but primarily because of the difference between the number of public versus private schools there are chasing those Omaha spots. Look at the four major conferences in baseball. The only private schools are Vanderbilt, TCU, Baylor, Miami, BC, Syracuse, Duke, Wake and Southern Cal. Of those BC, Syracuse and Wake don't even try to be good Duke only started trying recently. all of the others have been there at least once during that span.
The private school advantage only arose in 1999 when the NCAA started allowing non-athletic scholarships to first year players. Prior to that a player had to be on campus a year before he could get academic money.
(2) You take out schools who haven't been successful and of course the list looks more successful.
(3) Several of those programs on your list...namely Miami and Southern Cal (and one you missed)...were baseball powers well before 1999.
(4) The percentage of public schools in the "power four" that have made CWS in that time span is pretty high, too. Like, something like 7 of the 9 public schools in the ACC have made the CWS multiple times in that span. And Pittsburgh certainly doesn't try.
Your successful private schools have almost all had pretty high levels of success in football, men's basketball, and/or women's basketball. There's a bunch of reasons why private schools are good at baseball or pick your sport. It usually starts with having the right head coach, public or private school alike.
Right.Quote:
I never said private schools weren't good before 1999. I said the rules changes that year helped them. Being good at full scholarship sports is different that equivalency sports. And yes the right coach is still a huge part of the equation.
TXAggie2011 said:
It'll be interesting to see how it goes at Rice.
I think its important to keep in mind that their program covers tuition. And by tuition, they mean tuition and not fees, room and board, and other expenses. You also have to be admitted to Rice. Unless things have changed, they don't lower their admission requirements all the way to the NCAA minimums for athletes (as A&M and many others do.)
So, yeah, Rice may have the opportunity to scour the American lower and middle classes for baseball players. There are some caveats and still some potentially significant expenses.
Its complicated, and my point is always that folks ought not to oversell this caveat in the NCAA rules.