<p>Does anybody know what 2k erg time would be enticing to an ivy league coach (but especially Cornell's)? Also, what is considered the "minimum" SAT I score to be considered a serious Cornell athletic recruit?</p>
<p>It’s inversely proportional to your ERG times. Kidding – a bit, but not completely</p>
<p>So would a heavyweight who pulls a 6:25 and has about a 2200 SAT be a highly sought-after candidate?</p>
<p>Here is link to 2013 Crash-B results:
[C.R.A.S.H.-B.|</a> Results 2013](<a href=“http://www.crash-b.org/web/results-2013/]C.R.A.S.H.-B.*|*”>http://www.crash-b.org/web/results-2013/)</p>
<p>and to the Junior Men, Heavyweight
[2013</a> CRASH-B Sprints Results](<a href=“http://www.crash-b.org/web/wp-content/uploads/results/2013/event-JM.html]2013”>2013 CRASH-B Sprints Results)</p>
<p>Crash-B is widely acknowledged as a competitive field; you can see that a 2K 6:25 puts you in the top 7% of Junior Men, HW.</p>
<p>If you are a junior you should begin contacting coaches now who will ask for your school report (transcript, GPA, SATs/ACTs, etc) and rowing results, etc. I think a 2200+ SAT and 6:25 would get attention, but that is just the beginning of the process.</p>
<p>Right now coaches are busy pulling together (through admissions) their incoming (fall 2013) class so they may not respond until admission decisions are out in late March. </p>
<p>Search for threads on “Academic Index” if you want to learn more about how the Ivy League handles athletes with respect to academic performance.</p>