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Home » Baseball » Baseball Knowledge Base Article

If your are thinking of getting paid to play a sport after HS.....Why Your Son Should Play Baseball (the % are higher than other Sports)

By: Bear
Add to Mixx!

Just received this email from a nationally recognized HS baseball Coach.

very very interesting,

cheers

Dear Bear,
Why Your Son Should Play HS Baseball

(Because the estimated probability of Competing in Athletics Beyond the High School Interscholastic Level is Greater in Baseball than another other sport.)

Baseball
 About 0.5 %, or one in 200 of high school senior boys playing interscholastic baseball will eventually be drafted by an MLB team

 About 5.6 %, or less than three in 50 of high school senior boys interscholastic baseball players will go on to play men's baseball at a NCAA member institution.

 About 10.5 %, or less than eleven in 100 of NCAA senior male baseball players will get drafted by a Major League Baseball (MLB) team.

Football
 About 0.09 %, or nine in 10,000 of high school senior boys playing interscholastic football will eventually be drafted by an NFL team.

 About 5.8 percent, or one in 17, of all high school senior boys playing interscholastic football will go on to play football at a NCAA member institution.

 About 2.0 percent, or one in 50, of NCAA senior football players will get drafted by a National Football League (NFL) team.

Men's Basketball
 Less than one in 35, or 2.9 percent, of high school senior boys playing interscholastic basketball will go on to play men's basketball at a NCAA member institution.

 Less than one in 75, or 1.3 percent, of NCAA male senior basketball players will get drafted by a National Basketball Association (NBA) team.

 About three in 10,000, or 0.03 percent of high school senior boys playing interscholastic basketball will eventually be drafted by an NBA team.

Men's Ice Hockey
 Less than thirteen in 100, or about 12.9 percent, of high school senior boys interscholastic ice hockey players will go on to play men's ice hockey at a NCAA member institution.

 Less than 1 in 24, or about 4.1 percent, of NCAA senior male ice hockey players will get drafted by a National Hockey League (NHL) team.

 About one in 250, or About 0.4 percent of high school senior boys playing interscholastic ice hockey will eventually be drafted by an NHL team.

Men's Soccer
 Less than three in 50, or about 5.7 percent, of high school senior boys interscholastic soccer players will go on to play men's soccer at a NCAA member institution.

 Less than one in 50, or about 1.9 percent, of NCAA senior male soccer players will be drafted by a Major League Soccer (MLS) team.

 About one in 1,250, or About 0.08 percent of high school senior boys playing interscholastic soccer will eventually be drafted by an MLS team.


Methodology
To calculate the estimated probability of competing in athletics beyond the high school interscholastic level, data from several sources were combined.

First, the estimated number of high school student-athletes participating interscholastically in the sports having a major professional league in the United States was obtained from the National Federation of State High School Associations.

To calculate the number of high school seniors participating interscholastically in those sports, divide the total number of high school student-athletes participating by 3.5.

This figure was used because some high schools are three-year high schools while others are four-year high schools.
The estimated number of NCAA student-athletes competing in the sports with major professional leagues in the United States was obtained from the NCAA's 1982-99 Participation Statistics Report.

To estimate the number of NCAA roster positions in these sports available to an incoming freshmen class, divide the total number of NCAA student-athletes participating by 3.5.

This figure was used because current player attrition will leave more roster positions open than would be expected due to normal graduation.

To estimate the number of NCAA senior student-athletes participating in those sports, divide the total number of NCAA student-athletes participating by 4.5.

This figure was used because student-athletes participating in these sports often red shirt and therefore are on the team for five years. The number of college student-athletes drafted by the major professional sport leagues in the United States was calculated using the most recent draft data for each league.

To calculate the probability of a high school senior going on to participate for a NCAA institution in these sports, the estimated number of open NCAA roster positions was divided by the estimated number of high school seniors participating interscholastically in these sports.

To calculate the probability of a NCAA senior student-athlete being drafted by a professional team in these sports, the number of NCAA student-athletes drafted into these professional leagues was divided by the estimated number of NCAA senior student-athletes participating in these sports.

To calculate the probability of a high school senior student-athlete eventually being drafted by a professional team in these sports, divide the number of NCAA senior student-athletes drafted by a United States professional league in these sports by the estimated number of high school seniors participating interscholastically in these sports. All probabilities were multiplied by 100 to convert them to percentages.

Obviously, many assumptions and estimations are made in the process of calculating these figures. Therefore, the reader should not consider these figures to be exact, but instead should view these figures as educated calculations.

and as you say, cheers, your friend
BW

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