Re: UNH Wildcats 2013-14 Season Thread (Part 2)
Okay if people are going to use this as a legitimate reason for the lack of success on the ice then there needs to be some clarification/ facts. I'm not closely involved in the team or school so I don't know all the facts.
It sounds like this issue is more about 'special admits' for athletes than it is about the specific second language requirement. I don't know a ton about special admits but I know it goes on. I know it has become a big thing at big football/basketball schools. I think some football schools will have 50-75 percent of their players are special admits. But I don't know or haven't heard a lot about special admits for hockey players around the nation. I'm sure it goes on and it probably goes on a lot at some schools. Every school does not have special admits for athletes though(I'm sure a lot do, probably most would be my guess). Someone used a hypothetical with a recruit saying 10 schools want an athlete. 9 will use special admits and UNH would not. So what I was asking was some info to back that claim up. Now if anyone has this information it'd be interesting to look at. If no one does and someone has some spare time on their hands to maybe look at hockey east or top 20 schools and what their policy is on special admits for athletes to back up this claim. That'd be cool. If someone could gather their policy and how many athletes (preferably hockey players) are special admits. It may be hard to get all schools since private schools don't need to release that information.
Now what I'm really interested in is UNH and what their policy is. I admit I don't know really anything about this policy so if someone could fill me in and point me to some school paperwork/references to back it up.(UNH is a public university so this info is supposed to be available to the public) If no one does maybe someday when I have some time I'll try to find out but if someone has this info now, offer it up:
1) Has UNH ever had special admits for athletes?
3) If they did, what year did they get rid of special admits?
4) If they used to have them, how many athletes(preferably hockey players) were special admits each year? (It'd be interesting to compare # of special admits to success each year.)
5) What year did they change the language requirement from 1 to 2?
Now if UNH used to have special admits(Say from '95-'05) then certainly that could be a major cause for the lack of talent on the team. Certainly if the facts show that, for example, in 1999 & 2003 50 percent of the team was special admits and now it's zero.
Now if UNH has never had special admits for athletes then I'm still skeptical about changing the language requirement from 1 to 2 as being a major reason for the lack of talent/success for UNH. It certainly effects getting some recruits once in awhile though for sure. I'm not that ignorant. But I have posted on this subject before and I think I have made some good points. I know people have made up their mind and wont change their opinion. That's cool, I get that. And Ciocco made some really good points as well. But not all kids do the bare minimum to graduate high school. And in another hypothetical... I'm a good athlete or my son is. He's a really good hockey player and wants to play in college, good enough for D1. Going into high school I know colleges require 2 years of a language and I don't know a school will give me a special admit so I would want to get my two years of a language out of the way my first two years in HS. Now certainly some players who are really, really good may do the bare minimum to graduate HS and just rely on a special admit to whatever school they can. Probably wouldn't be too hard if you're that good. Maybe I'm way off in my 2 hypotheticals since I've never been a D1 coach or D1 recruit but I don't think it's unrealistic. But my guess is UNH isn't losing these real top quality players 'just' because of the language/ special admit policy if the alternative for a kid is to go play at Michigan/N. Dakota/Minn. Maybe they do and miss out on a good recruit here and there because he doesn't want to or hasn't taken 2 years of a language. I'll give you that. But that's not really something you can quantify in either direction. All teams/ schools miss out on or get recruits for a variety of reasons.
But in general I feel like there is plenty of talent out there in Canada & U.S. to field a good team who meet UNH admissions requirements. It's not like UNH is an Ivy league schools w/ Ivy league admission requirements who doesn't have special admits for athletes that pretty much results in not being able to recruit anyone and can't field a competitive team.
But this issue of lack of talent isn't only about the second language requirement and getting players from BC. Why isn't UNH getting top players from the U.S. anymore? Like Massachusetts. Can't blame that on the language requirement. But if there's been a change in the special admissions policy for athletes(???) then that is a debate I can get on board with.
Ummm....okay? Is that supposed to discredit the arguments he was making?
The foreign language requirement issue was brought up earlier in the thread and somebody dismissed it as trivial. I thought it was relevant, seeing as Ciocco had previously addressed that very argument in detail.
Okay if people are going to use this as a legitimate reason for the lack of success on the ice then there needs to be some clarification/ facts. I'm not closely involved in the team or school so I don't know all the facts.
It sounds like this issue is more about 'special admits' for athletes than it is about the specific second language requirement. I don't know a ton about special admits but I know it goes on. I know it has become a big thing at big football/basketball schools. I think some football schools will have 50-75 percent of their players are special admits. But I don't know or haven't heard a lot about special admits for hockey players around the nation. I'm sure it goes on and it probably goes on a lot at some schools. Every school does not have special admits for athletes though(I'm sure a lot do, probably most would be my guess). Someone used a hypothetical with a recruit saying 10 schools want an athlete. 9 will use special admits and UNH would not. So what I was asking was some info to back that claim up. Now if anyone has this information it'd be interesting to look at. If no one does and someone has some spare time on their hands to maybe look at hockey east or top 20 schools and what their policy is on special admits for athletes to back up this claim. That'd be cool. If someone could gather their policy and how many athletes (preferably hockey players) are special admits. It may be hard to get all schools since private schools don't need to release that information.
Now what I'm really interested in is UNH and what their policy is. I admit I don't know really anything about this policy so if someone could fill me in and point me to some school paperwork/references to back it up.(UNH is a public university so this info is supposed to be available to the public) If no one does maybe someday when I have some time I'll try to find out but if someone has this info now, offer it up:
1) Has UNH ever had special admits for athletes?
3) If they did, what year did they get rid of special admits?
4) If they used to have them, how many athletes(preferably hockey players) were special admits each year? (It'd be interesting to compare # of special admits to success each year.)
5) What year did they change the language requirement from 1 to 2?
Now if UNH used to have special admits(Say from '95-'05) then certainly that could be a major cause for the lack of talent on the team. Certainly if the facts show that, for example, in 1999 & 2003 50 percent of the team was special admits and now it's zero.
Now if UNH has never had special admits for athletes then I'm still skeptical about changing the language requirement from 1 to 2 as being a major reason for the lack of talent/success for UNH. It certainly effects getting some recruits once in awhile though for sure. I'm not that ignorant. But I have posted on this subject before and I think I have made some good points. I know people have made up their mind and wont change their opinion. That's cool, I get that. And Ciocco made some really good points as well. But not all kids do the bare minimum to graduate high school. And in another hypothetical... I'm a good athlete or my son is. He's a really good hockey player and wants to play in college, good enough for D1. Going into high school I know colleges require 2 years of a language and I don't know a school will give me a special admit so I would want to get my two years of a language out of the way my first two years in HS. Now certainly some players who are really, really good may do the bare minimum to graduate HS and just rely on a special admit to whatever school they can. Probably wouldn't be too hard if you're that good. Maybe I'm way off in my 2 hypotheticals since I've never been a D1 coach or D1 recruit but I don't think it's unrealistic. But my guess is UNH isn't losing these real top quality players 'just' because of the language/ special admit policy if the alternative for a kid is to go play at Michigan/N. Dakota/Minn. Maybe they do and miss out on a good recruit here and there because he doesn't want to or hasn't taken 2 years of a language. I'll give you that. But that's not really something you can quantify in either direction. All teams/ schools miss out on or get recruits for a variety of reasons.
But in general I feel like there is plenty of talent out there in Canada & U.S. to field a good team who meet UNH admissions requirements. It's not like UNH is an Ivy league schools w/ Ivy league admission requirements who doesn't have special admits for athletes that pretty much results in not being able to recruit anyone and can't field a competitive team.
But this issue of lack of talent isn't only about the second language requirement and getting players from BC. Why isn't UNH getting top players from the U.S. anymore? Like Massachusetts. Can't blame that on the language requirement. But if there's been a change in the special admissions policy for athletes(???) then that is a debate I can get on board with.
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