coach wrote:
Precious Roy wrote:
Parents pay for these trips. When a team travels, it will usually be a combination of booster fundraising and parents paying. School budgets across the US are so tight that it is almost unheard of to have a school fund extra trips for sports teams or band, etc.
When there is scholarship money on the line, parents really cannot afford to NOT send their kids to these events. A free ride is worth about $200k+ these days. A few thousand in plane tickets, hotels, rental cars etc. is nothing in comparison. In fact, compared to other sports, the investment you have to make in runners is pretty cheap. Parents will spend close to six figures on kids who are playing tennis tournaments on the national level. There is a volleyball team in my area that parents pay $18k a year to get their kids on. And even in the sports like baseball there are all these all star invite teams where parents have to pay a lot of money to get their kids in front of scouts for college and the pros.
18,000$ a year in the hope of getting a scholarship? Might as well put the money in a 529 each year when they're young and college will be paid for.
Rich parents are not doing it only for the scholarship since they have the dough. They are doing it for the exposure, they are thinking about what will enrich their kids' experience. Some may think the difference is marginal, but it makes all the difference for a 4:12 miler who is ranked #1 in their state to go to Arcadia and run a 4:08 and not even win. They will be more confident, they will feel they belong with the big shots, they will get a glimpse of what it's like to get on a plane and prepare for a race like a pro. When they get to the collegiate level, their mindset and expectations may be completely different then their peers, possibly because of that one experience. When college is a given, you can focus on the marginal things that will make you more competitive.