I have a friend who played college softball, she speculated had her parents just put all the money away for her college instead of spending it all on select teams and tournaments she needed to get the scholarship they probably would have come out ahead money wise. But she got to play college ball which very few of us get the chance to do.
Yes, but some can afford it and still fund college savings plans
Literally almost anyone can play NAIA or D3 and they will find you money and make you feel special.
Depends upon the definition of play. NAIAs will load up rosters(most are 'specials'), few quota builders get meaningful time. Pull out your sprinsteen album, and put 'Glory Days'.
My nephew plays NAIA baseball in Iowa. He gets a 50% scholarship and only has to pay about $17,000 a year of his own money to play baseball for them. His parents dropped tons of money on select baseball growing up. I shake my head. It would be cheaper to go to UNO or UNL without a scholarship and only have to focus on getting an education. These small colleges are all about sports. Most all of the students at his college are athletes. No one else goes there.
This is spot on particularly at NAIA schools. Athletics aside, every college in Nebraska from UNL to Chadron, to Doane has a growth strategy, and they are competing for a flat to shrinking pool of Nebraska HS graduates. Thus the NAIAs in NE have resorted to sports as a way to feed admissions. Graduation rates are not rising with this strategy, enrollment is flat to shrinking with less money from tuition coming in...plus constant turn in student body. The sports for admission strategy is not sustainable and many Nebraska colleges are in a tough spot financially. Expect to seem more Danas.
What people don't get, including many in this thread, even with this admissions scheme is kids that truly get recruited (primes) even to these NAIA in Nebraska, get real cash, and those that are quota targets ('specials') don't athletic money. In FB, these are the kids Frost is targeting for walkons. (FCS, D2s have teh same carving up of scholarship flexibility).
Take BAsketball - NAIA II schools like the GMAC in Nebraska are allowed to give out 6 full tuition scholarships per year, but have routine quotas for 30 player rosters. Figure out what the school tuition is, multiply by 6, and that is the amount they can carve up.
They will combine with academic awards. The 'prime' recruits typically gets academic award(discount) + athletic and pay very little if anything....ie full rides. For basketball a school like Concordia will have 10-12 of 30 players on a roster with a combination of funds equate to very robust packages and some full rides. The other 18-20 on the roster get the institution discounts, academic $ if they can, plus any morsels out of the pool the coach can hand out. These 18-20 have long roads to the court in a sport like BB. That is why they have JV teams.
D3s, which there is 1 in the entire state of Nebraska, is similar, but with some differences. It is all academic based aid, and they generally have better academic reputations(generally!). Some will use sports to pad admissions, but not to the extent NAIA schools do. A player from my kids summer team turned down a D2 full ride, a D2 partial, and several NAIA because they were smart (robust academic scholarships) and didn't want to attend college in a backwater town, at sparsely endowed schools. They selected a $50k a year D3 college that is always really good in BB, academically strong, and doesn't quota players to the degree the NAIAs around here do. In this case the student body is only 20% athletes...and very healthy financially. The BB program is resourced better with staff and facilities than any GMAC school.
If you have kids, hopefully this is helpful. If you are in the camp of anyone can play small college ball, you're wrong, and cue up your Bruce Springsteen CD and put 'Glory Days" on repeat.