<p>Last year I did track and field and I absolutely HATED it. This spring, I wanna do something else, but I dunno what. I'm good at both golf and tennis, and I may try out for those, but the thing is that I can only do one of them.</p>
<p>I'm better at golf than tennis, and I have a feeling that if I do golf then I'll actually be able to play more, whereas if I do tennis, there are people WAY better than me, and I'll just end up sitting on the bench. I may sound like a completely selfish brat, but would tennis come off as better on a college resume?</p>
<p>My school is small, and I'm fairly certain I'd make each team, so...I dunno. Any suggestions?</p>
<p>I played tennis last year and was "benched" the entire season (although I was the 4th or 5th best on the team of 12.......... the coach had problems). It was terrible. </p>
<p>I say golf if you actually want to play. And I don't think colleges would think tennis was a better sport anyway (or the other way around). It's not as if tennis is some college-obsessed sport such as football for example.</p>
<p>You can play just about any sport if you're fast, in shape, and have some idea of what you're doing. It's being dedicated that makes the difference, so you should pick a sport and stick with it.</p>
<p>man play golf....i mean think about it...would you rather sit and watch them play, or be with them? plus, golf is awesome in good weather..although boring.</p>
<p>Armando you are very wrong, golf doesn't keep you in shape at all...I off-road and waterski, that keeps you in shape not just walking through a camp...golof is more of a mental sport than a physical sport.</p>
<p>I'm sorry, have you SEEN some of the courses that pro golfers play?</p>
<p>Even in the 3 years that I played high school golf, we played some courses where girls had to get sent home (or at least sent out of the game) because the courses were too intense and girls were getting physically sick.</p>
<p>You're thinking of old men who ride golf carts around. On most high school teams, you are not, under any circumstances (barring physical ailments) allowed to ride in golf carts, nor are we allowed to have caddies. Take it from someone who played golf for 3 years; I lost at LEAST 10 pounds per season.</p>
<p>Also, take a look at the really amazing pro golfers: Tiger Woods, Phil Mickleson, heck even Michelle Wie (or however you spell her last name). They're all in incredible shape.</p>
<p>High School Golf can be demanding, but its one of the few HS sports (bowling being the other) in which speed, agility, and endurance (somewhat) don't matter. Golf still requires you to be fit though. But personally, I like tennis more.</p>