Kids don't go to Milford for academics anymore. When it was in CT, many kids would come to repeat their senior years, not the case now. Once a student graduates from HS his GPA is locked. The SAT's are the only thing he can improve.
Exactly. Milford was the primary prep school for Yale, for about 80 years. Yale, since the mid 90s, has since moved on and has a couple of prep schools that they farm. Milford was a full time, academic secondary school with commuters and boarders. It was in Milford, CT, up to I think 2003. The leadership from the early 90s on or so ran he place literally into the ground. By 2001 or so, about a decade a go, the school was literally days away from shutting its' doors for good, and closing up shop for good. Health code violations, building code violations, delinquency in every form of debt service, the school was a disaster. The local community basically put up an ultimatum, and were willing to buy out the property, renovate, etc, but the school would have to pay back the bonding. Instead of taking that on, the school packed up, re-dedicated it's mission, and moved to NY.
Chaplick has been there through it all, and has done a phenomenal job, of building a post-grade secondary level (post high school) educational instituation that is 100% football oriented and geared toward taking kids that have graduated high school, but aren't NCAA eligible for scholarship, and getting them NCAA eligible. That's the school's mission now, in a nutshell, and they're good at it, and they're successful financially now, and htey have produced many good players, some of which have gone on to very impressive colleges, and made it to the NFL.
But, the fact is, that nobody is going to MIlford Academy, after high school, unless they didn't get the work they needed to get done in high school. This kind of thing is not unique to Milford, schools like this exist all over the country.
Milford lists the University of Connecticut as a destination school that graduates have gone on to, but I honestly can't recall right now, who we've accepted on scholarship to play football from there. Anybody know?
The other fact, is that NCAA eligibility requirements, are not the same, as individual university admission requirements, OR requirements mandated by conference level administration.
With regards to the Big East conference, and the future of UConn football, the rules and regulations of admission requirements, for scholarship athletes, is a HUGE,,,,,HUGE part of establishing a new conference structure, and Lord help me, I hope that Warde isn't asleep at the wheel on this.
As for Mr. Nastahowski - as I said yesterday - I wish him the best in his future in getting a college education as a student-athlete. It's always good to see a local kid get the ticket.