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  1. Just a casual observation here.... The fact that a middle school aged kid has "handlers" makes me sick to my stomach. What's next? Will we have "handlers" and AAU coaches in delivery rooms looking for the next prospect they can latch onto and leech off of?
  2. How is that not a double standard? On the one hand you say a student can leave a private school environment for whatever reason if he or she thinks they will better flourish in the public school environment, but if a student in a public schools thinks he/she has a better opportunity in a private school after attending public schools there is something wrong with their decision making. What about the vast majority of students that for whatever reason are not able to get into, as you put it, the "best" public schools. You have addressed in other threads how hard it is to get into Male and that student athletes get no preferential treatment in admission. Just for the sake of this discussion lets say I agree with you, I'll even extend that to the other "best" public high schools (for this discussion only). How many students apply to Male or Manual or Ballard or PRP etc. each year that are turned down? On the other hand if you apply to Trinity and arrange to pay the tuition you get in. Contrary to what some believe no one is turned away. It is then up to the student to follow schools guidelines to remain in school. Maybe there are parents out there who do not want to put something as important as their childrens education to an enrollment lottery or some arbitrary quota and are willing to pay to insure they get their kids into a "better" school. And like the Ahrens' maybe there are kids who go to Trinity or X just because they feel they can better reach their athletic goals there. How is that a bad thing?
  3. The fact that Oxnard is a Xavarian makes me more suspicious of his claims. I think that he and other Tiggers would like nothing better then to see Trinity get a black eye. I don't know or understand why you find it necessary to rake me over the coals like this but so be it. As I recall the person making a claim is usually the one burdened to prove their claims. Review my initial post, I clearly stated that I had no statistics to back up my assertion. However you asked for examples: I may not be the sharpest tack in the box but I think I provided exactly what you requested. Besides, (and I may not have stated this as clearly as intended, if so, my bad) I intended to convey that more total students (not just star athletes) leave private schools and enter public high schools then vice versa. Again, I will freely admit that I have no proof of that, it is only an assumption.
  4. I was just responding to the assertion that I could not name star athletes that left the catholic school system for public schools. Of course we all know that the coaches at Male or Ballard never did anything to "attract" these two young men to their respective schools don't we. :thumb: You made the point that the Ahren's boys left the private school system because they had a better chance of fulfilling their potential at their chosen (not mandated) public schools. Does that same argument not apply to those athletes that chose to play for a private school after being in the public school system or are you advocating a double standard?
  5. In what was an other wise well thought out and intelligent post that presented a possible justification for the JCPS position why did you feel the need to insert this line? Of course you can back up your contention that athletic ability has an influence on how finincial aid is awarded at Trinity and st. Xavier, don't you? Wow, that's putting a lot on the shoulders of an eighth grader. One kid could have been the savior of a public school's athletic program. Did you ever consider that maybe Tayshawn's parents made the sacrafices necassary to put their son in Trinity because they felt he would be in a better educational environment then if he had stayed in the public school system? Conversely, since you seem to have a problem with kids going from public middle to private high school how do you chime in on kids who leave catholic schools after 8th grade to go to public schools? If public school kids should be off limits to private schools coaches then shouldn't kids in the CSAA be out of bounds for a public schools coach? I would venture to say (and this is just conjecture, I have no data to back it up) that more kids leave the catholic system and go to public high schools then vice versa.
  6. You are correct. It is already happening. I just think the powers that be in Jefferson County are trying to keep this quieter then their Fayette County counterparts.
  7. Before anyone goes WAY OFF about the evil Catholic schools invading the public middle schools (I know you didn't Ram95 but trust me someone will soon) I want to relate the fact that I distinctly remember the guidence counselors from Southern High School visiting my very Catholic elementary school extolling the virtues of their school. This was not recently either it was about 30 years ago, well before the days of open enrollment.
  8. But they do play by the same rules, those establised by the KHSAA. The rules that apply to the private schools that allow students from outside their county, or state for that matter, play on their teams apply to the public schools as well. Some independent school districts allow students from outside their district to attend their schools if they pay tuition. If your school (or district) dosen't allow that then your school (or district) is limiting themselves. How fair is it to penalize a school, or schools, for abiding by the rules (as established by the KHSAA) because another school, or schools, chooses not to take advantage of every resource they could have under those same rules.
  9. This is hypocracy at it's finest (or worst). Schools like Male, Ballard and PRP can put a strangle hold on one or more sports and beat all other public school competition and that is just peachy. When are the oh so concerned powers that be in Jefferson County going to start holding those programs hostage by refusing to play them? All I have to say is if the public schools wanted to really throw gasoline on the fire and provide even more motivation for Trinity and X they just did it. Ask the guys at Easten what it was like playing Trinity after their principal and AD canned the frosh and JV games. This is not going to be pretty.
  10. You seem to advocate a position that if someone recieves finincial aid he/she should not play sports. Since the aid at Trinity, X, etc. is need based would you extend this to kids at public schools that are on free or reduced lunch programs? That is also a need based program.
  11. What about? 1. DeSales 2. Holy Cross 3. Kentucky Country Day 4. Christain Academy of Louisville
  12. Austinman... Trinity, like all schools in Jefferson County, recruits students. With open enrollment they have to. Trinity has a finincial aid program in place to help students with finincial need. So do public schools, it's called the free lunch program. Regardless of what the belief may be athletics have absolutely nothing to do with who gets aid. And I honestly believe that if Trinity did not have the tradition of success that it has these factors would not make a difference. It's a whole lot easier to make a teenager give up a large part of his time when he knows there is a very good chance he will compete for a state championship. You have never, ever heard me say that the numbers at Trinity don't help, what I said that it was only one factor of many.
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