How bad would it look if...

<p>I don't do tennis senior year? Freshman and soph year I was on JV, junior i was on Varsity, and I don't really want to do it this year, partly because I am busy with a college multivariable calc class and president of Key Club. Would that look bad though, to stop after 3 years?</p>

<p>It's fine to stop something if you're no longer interested and are involved in other things. Devote your extra time to doing a great job as Key Club president. That would be better than being a bored tennis player.</p>

<p>Don't be driven on fear.</p>

<p>i would say, depends on where ur applying. Harvard would not be happy with that, but most people don't apply to harvard, so...u get it.</p>

<p>Harvard wouldn't care if you dropped a club or sport you're not interested in. Harvard would care about what you accomplish as Key Club president. Speaking as an alum interviewer for Harvard.</p>

<p>Yeah people seem to forget that it's not what your title is, it's what you do.</p>

<p>I dropped serious music (13 years) senior year b/c my classes (six APs) wouldn't allow it. Got into all my ivies. Go for what you really desire (calc and Key Club) and don't worry about the tennis. Listen to Northstarmom: she knows her stuff </p>

<p>Good luck to you (speaking as an alum interviewer for another Ivy, non-H)</p>

<p>Honestly, I know you don't want to see this, but do what you want. If you don't want to continue tennis, then don't. Don't let college ruin your senior year.</p>

<p>There can be 1000s of reasons why you left a sport. I dont think College would give a damn that you dropped a sport for something else.</p>

<p>I second sparkle415</p>

<p>I think it's important that the OP is dropping because of other obligations.</p>

<p>If he/she was simply dropping because they got bored/lazy, then it would be bad.</p>

<p>Isn't tennis a spring sport anyway. . . colleges wouldn't care because you are already accepted by then. . .</p>