The Varsity Dilemma
You are a junior in high school. You play Varsity Baseball. You are decent, but you are not getting recruited by college coaches.
Baseball takes up 15 hours a week. You want to major in Pre-Med. You are wondering: "Should I quit baseball and spend those 15 hours shadowing a doctor or doing lab research instead?"
The answer depends entirely on the narrative you are trying to build.
The Value of Varsity Sports (If Not Recruited)
If you are not an actively recruited athlete, playing a Varsity sport is generally a Tier 3 Extracurricular.Admissions officers love Varsity athletes because it proves:
However, if you are applying as a Pre-Med Biology major to Johns Hopkins, being the starting shortstop does absolutely nothing to prove your academic competence in the sciences.
The Value of Academic Research
If you quit baseball and secure a role assisting a professor in a local university biology lab (a Tier 2 or Tier 1 Extracurricular), you radically change your applicant profile.The Correct Decision
Do not cling to a sport just because it is fun if it is actively cannibalizing the time you need to build your academic Spike.
Compare EC Tier Value
Which activity adds more value to your Common App? Compare them mathematically.
Compare Extracurriculars