Welcome to the Hardcore Husky Forums. Folks who are well-known in Cyberland and not that dumb.

LA Basin Recruiting Map with Fast/Slow Strategy (per Capita Income) Overlay

Comments

  • BleachedAnusDawg
    BleachedAnusDawg Member Posts: 13,320 Standard Supporter
    Overlay that with a demographics map.
  • MelloDawg
    MelloDawg Member Posts: 6,852
    Useless without overlaying topographic information to see which kids play at altitude....or add a pie chart.
  • Swaye
    Swaye Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 41,739 Founders Club
    So where I see big dots are the black neighborhoods?
  • dnc
    dnc Member Posts: 56,840
    Swaye said:

    So where I see big dots are the black neighborhoods?

    Not if they’re in green areas
  • PurpleThrobber
    PurpleThrobber Member Posts: 48,130 Standard Supporter
    Swaye said:

    So where I see big dots are the black neighborhoods?

    No, brah. Dots are Mumbai style Indians.

    You should know that.
  • haie
    haie Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 23,820 Founders Club
    Did we tell their hs coaches to fuck off yet?
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,325 Founders Club
    At lest Sam Darnold and his boogie board got a little blue dot
  • FremontTroll
    FremontTroll Member Posts: 4,744
    What is the big red rectangle south of LA but north of Compton/Inglewood? Messicans?
  • FremontTroll
    FremontTroll Member Posts: 4,744
    Also, Long Beach Poly FTW. Get your pimp coat on and get in there CP. Fuck those soft nerd Dane Crane looking kids out in Anaheim.
  • dnc
    dnc Member Posts: 56,840

    The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.

    Neighborhoods gentrify and degentrify but institutions oftentimes stay put. I don't know anything about the dynamics of Mater Dei and SJB, but I know this is why some of the nicest privates (lol!) in Memphis are in the hood.
  • theknowledge
    theknowledge Member, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 5,650 Founders Club

    The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.

    Hmm. Mater Dei is a rich school in a poor neighborhood. Hmm. Why do their studs always seem to go to USC? Hmm, what is the correlation?
  • IPukeOregonGrellow
    IPukeOregonGrellow Member Posts: 2,183
    dnc said:

    The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.

    Neighborhoods gentrify and degentrify but institutions oftentimes stay put. I don't know anything about the dynamics of Mater Dei and SJB, but I know this is why some of the nicest privates (lol!) in Memphis are in the hood.
    The way gentrification in LA is working is that in ten years the LA versions of backthepack will be claiming they're straight out of Compton or from the LBC. While the fast-strategy kids will have dads with two-to-three hour commutes in places not served by the light rail line.

  • AIRWOLF
    AIRWOLF Member Posts: 1,840
    edited February 2018

    The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.

    In pulling up some of the data that I couldn't bulk download I noticed that the tuition levels of the Catholic high schools in the area vary widely. Some of the better football programs are, not surprisingly, at Catholic schools with very low tuition. I think it is fair to assume that they also provide tuition assistance to some especially needy students good football players.

    Some of them charge $6,000-$9,000 per year for tuition, which is a level that is at least somewhat accessible to middle income families. Others are in the mid- to high-teens. For reference, tuition at Eastside Catholic is around $30K.