Scholarships....
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Scholarships....
I was just wondering how high do you think you would have to jump to get a good amount (60% +) of scholarship money. In my 2nd year of vaulting (sophmore year) I've cleared 13. I am just wondering how far I have to go.
- theflyingkorean
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- mcminkz05
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ok
i think it depends on what school and what they need. 17' sounds a little high for a minimun, but we had a vaulter last year that got a scholarship to a smaller d1 school and he jumped 15'.
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If you can get more than 60% as a freshman pole vaulter at all you are getting a hell of a deal. I have known several 17 footers in high school that have gotten much less than that. If you want a full ride you pretty much better jump 17+ and run a 47 flat 400 or a 10.5 100, either that or jump 18 feet in high school. Not to be discouraging, but pole vaulters are usually not that great of an investment for most D1 programs. So if any of you guys jumped less than that and got 60% then good job. You cant do it for the money!
How high you jump is only a small factor in the amount of scholarship you can get. The school, strength of conference, scholarships available, etc., all play a role. For example, the high school national record holder only got 80% at a major program but I've seen 16'0" guys on a full ride at smaller schools. There isn't a magic height that will get you a scholarship. Being flexible about where you are willing to go to school while carrying a good PR and good grades will get you a lot farther than just a good PR.
Also, it helps to be good in more than one event. Whether you jump 10' or 19', all you can score for your team is 10 points. And since a lot of coaching jobs ride on how they perform as a team at conference, it doesn't make a lot of sense to spend a lot of money on someone who can only score a maximum of 10 points when they can spent the same amount on a multi-eventer who can score in the 3-4 events and bring in 30+ points.
Anyway, if you really need the money, apply for academic scholarships and grants. That's a lot more stable source of money than an athletic scholarship which is only for one year anyway.
Also, it helps to be good in more than one event. Whether you jump 10' or 19', all you can score for your team is 10 points. And since a lot of coaching jobs ride on how they perform as a team at conference, it doesn't make a lot of sense to spend a lot of money on someone who can only score a maximum of 10 points when they can spent the same amount on a multi-eventer who can score in the 3-4 events and bring in 30+ points.
Anyway, if you really need the money, apply for academic scholarships and grants. That's a lot more stable source of money than an athletic scholarship which is only for one year anyway.
"You have some interesting coaching theories that seem to have little potential."
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