Approximately 7% of high school athletes go on to compete in College Sports at any level, according to the NCAA. This percentage varies by sport, with some sports having higher transition rates than others. While many high school athletes aspire to play at the collegiate level, the competition is fierce, and only a small fraction earn athletic scholarships or spots on college teams.
Micheal Jordan
i think they can get paid.
This is often a misreported number because most studies do not include NCAA Division III, NAIA and all Junior Colleges. If you were to take the total number of High School Participants (7,092,999) and the Total Number of College Participants (581,077) you are looking at more than 8%. Obviously that is a rough number and doesn't take into account graduating seniors to available freshmen positions but it gives you a ballpark number. It also ranges greatly by sport.
Around one third
english
Bill Clinton never played a varsity sport in high school or college. His favorite sport later in life and as president is Golf.
you may get a letterman jacket in high school and college when playing a varsity sport
baseball,soccer, and rugby
Under 24 is a fast time for high-school upperclassmen and college athletes.
For the 2012-2013 school year 1,088,158 high school athletes played football. Football is the top ranked participation high school sport in the United States.
Yes, you can.
i would say about 2%