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Archive for: Ivy League Athletes

Ivy League and Athletes

There’s a great op-ed in “The Columbia Spectator” by first-year student Josh Fram in which he writes about why athletes belong in the Ivy League. In the op-ed, Fram writes about how athletes on Columbia’s campus are often asked, “Oh…so you’re an athlete?” With this question, it’s implied that student-athletes aren’t as good academically as are non-athletes. According to the op-ed, “Objectively, it is clear that these sentiments are based in truth. A 2007 study conducted by sociologists Douglas Massey and Margarita Mooney shows that Ivy League athletes scored on average 93 points lower than non-athletes on the SAT. They reported a similar discrepancy with regard to high school GPAs. And according to James Shulman and William Bowen’s book ‘The Game of Life,’ published in 2002, these same trends persist in college.”

Ivy League Athletes, Athletes from Ivy League, Ivy League Athletic Achievements

Ivy League athletes often become quite successful in the real world after college. Josh Fram has a great piece about this in “The Columbia Spectator.”

But others argue that student-athletes are more successful after college than their non-athlete peers. They’ve worked as member of teams. They’ve held leadership positions. They understand their role. These are some of the things that are inherently intwined with sport. And shouldn’t a highly selective college seek out students who they think will be successful after college? After all, don’t they want to admit the next President of the United States and CEO of IBM and founder of the next big startup? You bet. As referenced in the op-ed, “But as former Harvard Dean of Admissions William Bender famously proclaimed, ‘If you let in only the brilliant, then you produce bookworms and bench scientists; you end up as socially irrelevant as the University of Chicago.’”

What do you think would happen to a university if they admitted only students with perfect SAT scores and grades? Do you think they’d be more or less likely to pick the next President of the United States? Do you think the college would be stronger or weaker for this decision? Let us know your thoughts on the matter by posting below!

Athletes from the Ivy League

What makes athletes from the Ivy League different from athletes from, say, the ACC, Big East, or SCC? Well, for one, Ivy League athletes don’t earn scholarships. They also have to meet certain admissions criteria (see our post on the Ivy League Academic Index) and they tend to be student-athletes more so than athletes who happen to also go to school. One great example of such an athlete is Andrew Goldstein, a graduate of Dartmouth College, where he played goalie on the lacrosse team and earned two honorable mention All-American nods.

Athletes from Ivy League, Ivy League Athletes, Athletes in Ivy League, Ivy League Athletics

Ivy League athletes like Andrew Goldstein are true examples of student-athletes with an emphasis on the student.

Andrew Goldstein is regarded as the first male professional team sport athlete in North America to be openly gay during his playing career. Goldstein played for two seasons of Major League Lacrosse – first with the Boston Cannons and then with the Long Island Lizards. Goldstein was openly gay at Dartmouth as this SportsCenter piece points out, a piece we at The Ivy Coach happened to have a whole lot to do with.

Since leaving lacrosse, Goldstein has become an outspoken advocate of not saying “gay” in a derogatory way in locker rooms. He’s also become a biology professor at UCLA and made a notable publication in the prestigious “Science” magazine by leading a team of researchers that found the possible cell of origin for prostate cancer. Wow.

Now that is an Ivy League athlete for you! Want to read more? Check out this piece on ESPN about the Ivy League athlete or this one on the historic nature of Goldstein’s example as an openly gay athlete.

Ivy League Athletics

Ivy League Sports, Ivy League Athletes, Ivy League Athletics, Ivy League Football, Ivy League and Football

A preseason poll forecasting the seasons of Ivy League football teams has come out this week and the University of Pennsylvania has been projected to win the Ivy League, collecting 12 of 17 first-place votes. Following Penn is Harvard and then Yale, Brown, Dartmouth, Columbia, Princeton, and Cornell, respectively. Penn has won the last two Ivy League titles so it is no surprise that they’ve been projected to earn another championship. They also boast a 15-game winning streak in Ivy League play, a streak spanning over two football seasons.

And now for some Ivy League football trivia to get you ready for the upcoming season! Post your answers below!

- Which Ivy League college boats the most Ivy League football championships?

A.) Penn

B.) Harvard

C.) Cornell

D.) Dartmouth

- In one of the greatest upsets of the 20th century, this Ivy League college won the 1934 Rose Bowl over Stanford University thanks to a trick play known as KF-79 by QB and eventual MVP Cliff Montgomery.

A.) Cornell

B.) Columbia

C.) Harvard

D.) Princeton

- The starting QB for the Buffalo Bills attended this Ivy League college.

A.) Harvard

B.) Dartmouth

C.) Brown

D.) Yale

- Jay Fiedler starred at QB for this Ivy League university.

A.) Yale

B.) Dartmouth

C.) Columbia

D.) Princeton

Ivy League Athletes

Ivy League Athletics, Ivy League Sports, Athletics at Ivy League Colleges, Ivy League Admissions

In this chart from the "Daily Princetonian," it seems not all Ivy League athletic programs are created equal. Brown University and Columbia University have some catching up to do.

How do you think Brown’s athletic program compares to Princeton’s? How do the Big Green stack up against the Bulldogs? Well, if you’re judging these Ivy League athletes and programs based on how many Ivy League championships the universities earned in total this past academic year, then Princeton University is the runaway winner with fifteen Ivy League titles across both men’s and women’s varsity sports. In second place is Yale University with 7 titles followed by a three-way tie between Harvard, Cornell, and Penn with 4, Dartmouth with 2, and Brown and Columbia with 0. That’s right. Zero. From football to baseball to swimming to softball and crew, Brown and Columbia won a combined zero Ivy League championships this past year.

Check out our blog on Brown University Athletic Cuts and on Brown Athletic Recruitment difficulties to find out why Brown University might be behind the curve in Ivy League sports. What do you think Columbia and Brown can do to keep up with their Ivy League peers in athletics? Let us know your thoughts by posting below!