I think if people are honest they will tell you 79th & Western is working against them just like 63rd & Western was working against them before the move. There's no doubt that they are losing kids to Rice, Marist & recently Naz & St.Laurence. I agree Catholic league football is better with a healthy St. Rita. I hope they can weather the current storm.Don't take this the wrong way, but I don't see the Mustangs winning more than 3 games this season. What's going on over on 79th St?
I think if people are honest they will tell you 79th & Western is working against them just like 63rd & Western was working against them before the move. There's no doubt that they are losing kids to Rice, Marist & recently Naz & St.Laurence. I agree Catholic league football is better with a healthy St. Rita. I hope they can weather the current storm.
No doubt can be done and I hope it does but it's certainly an issue. It was talked about a lot last year with the possibility of Rita moving to Lincoln Way North property.Not saying that 79th and Western doesn't have its challenges, but so does Woodlawn with MC, and so did the neighborhood around Iggy before it became gentrified. It can be done.
It is possible Naz has lost 2 LaGrange residents that I can remember to Marist and Brother Rice. Competing for the same kids is possible just pretty rare. Every school within the 30 mile radius are competing with each other for kids.A few questions from the uninitiated:
When did St Rita move? I attended one of the Illini' spring practices there a few years ago and thought the field looked great...nice campus feel as well.
Would St Rita actually "lose" kids to Naz?!? It doesn't seem geographically feasible. One school is on the south side of Chicacgo while the other is in LaGrange Park...realistically how many buses would a kid have to take to make that trip? How long would it take?
I must've been living in some alternate universe but I always thought St Rita & Mt Carmel were fairly close to each other, perhaps even on the same street. I looked both up yesterday and had no idea Mt Carmel is so close to the U of C; Rita is where I thought is was.
I dated a girl (many years ago) from Palos Hills and went to Stagg. I remember talking to her brother (also went to Stagg) when he was in 8th grade and him telling me every kid on their block was going to a different high school...St Laurence, Marist, Stagg, Brother Rice, Mt Carmel..... Isn't traveling from Palos Hills to Mt. Carmel just an insane commute?!? Is Mt Carmel's academics considered that great that a family would bypass Stagg, Marist, Brother Rice, St Laurence, St Rita, etc. etc.?
Are tuitions pretty standard across the board among CCL schools?
None of my questions are meant to insult anyone or their schools and apologies if they do as that isn't my intention; I just wanted some perspective.
A few questions from the uninitiated:
When did St Rita move? I attended one of the Illini' spring practices there a few years ago and thought the field looked great...nice campus feel as well.
Would St Rita actually "lose" kids to Naz?!? It doesn't seem geographically feasible. One school is on the south side of Chicacgo while the other is in LaGrange Park...realistically how many buses would a kid have to take to make that trip? How long would it take?
I must've been living in some alternate universe but I always thought St Rita & Mt Carmel were fairly close to each other, perhaps even on the same street. I looked both up yesterday and had no idea Mt Carmel is so close to the U of C; Rita is where I thought is was.
I dated a girl (many years ago) from Palos Hills and went to Stagg. I remember talking to her brother (also went to Stagg) when he was in 8th grade and him telling me every kid on their block was going to a different high school...St Laurence, Marist, Stagg, Brother Rice, Mt Carmel..... Isn't traveling from Palos Hills to Mt. Carmel just an insane commute?!? Is Mt Carmel's academics considered that great that a family would bypass Stagg, Marist, Brother Rice, St Laurence, St Rita, etc. etc.?
Are tuitions pretty standard across the board among CCL schools?
None of my questions are meant to insult anyone or their schools and apologies if they do as that isn't my intention; I just wanted some perspective.
Id say #1 is StL getting kids. BR on uptick taking kids to as well as Marist. I know of some key kids Rita lost out on at the end to BR. Rita also lost frosh game to Pats. Not hearing good things on the class. In fact they don't even have frosh roster on the site I heard extremely low #.Don't take this the wrong way, but I don't see the Mustangs winning more than 3 games this season. What's going on over on 79th St?
A few questions from the uninitiated:
When did St Rita move? I attended one of the Illini' spring practices there a few years ago and thought the field looked great...nice campus feel as well.
Would St Rita actually "lose" kids to Naz?!? It doesn't seem geographically feasible. One school is on the south side of Chicacgo while the other is in LaGrange Park...realistically how many buses would a kid have to take to make that trip? How long would it take?
I must've been living in some alternate universe but I always thought St Rita & Mt Carmel were fairly close to each other, perhaps even on the same street. I looked both up yesterday and had no idea Mt Carmel is so close to the U of C; Rita is where I thought is was.
I dated a girl (many years ago) from Palos Hills and went to Stagg. I remember talking to her brother (also went to Stagg) when he was in 8th grade and him telling me every kid on their block was going to a different high school...St Laurence, Marist, Stagg, Brother Rice, Mt Carmel..... Isn't traveling from Palos Hills to Mt. Carmel just an insane commute?!? Is Mt Carmel's academics considered that great that a family would bypass Stagg, Marist, Brother Rice, St Laurence, St Rita, etc. etc.?
Are tuitions pretty standard across the board among CCL schools?
None of my questions are meant to insult anyone or their schools and apologies if they do as that isn't my intention; I just wanted some perspective.
Don't take this the wrong way, but I don't see the Mustangs winning more than 3 games this season. What's going on over on 79th St?
I agree that St. Rita having a good team is good for the CCL. Rice and Rita are always in competition for football talent. They were not good last year so i hope they do a lot better this year.I really don't know. Br. Rice has improved so much, I'm sure that's hurt Rita. It's always been my opinion that St Rita having a good team is good for the CCL, and good for the south side neighborhoods.
Actually SR had losing seasons in '12 and '15 so that is 2 of the last 4 and this year will be 3 of 5 .I call BS on CCLGuy99!!! SR has had 2 losing seasons since 1975, that's 40 years. They won a state title in 2006. Semi-finals in 2010 and 2011, Qr-finals in 2008 and 2009. They have had plenty more success than BR, SL, and Marist in recent years. Take a look at the teams that have eliminated them since 2004... Providence, MC, WWS, Lake Zurich, WWS, ESL, WWS, MC, and MC. Very few teams in the state that would get past those teams. They are apparently losing kids to those schools, but not for that reason. SL had a losing record 4 consecutive years prior to last season. Try again.
Yeah in this day and age having 3 of 5 losing seasons is not good - you then have to look also at the underclassmen results as well and how they can project into the future. Rita does lose some key Seniors with Rule, Zaleski, McDevitt, Coghlan, Mondesir, etc.to name but a fewActually SR had losing seasons in '12 and '15 so that is 2 of the last 4 and this year will be 3 of 5 .
Okay... three seasons in 40 years if you exclude the prep bowl. So you agree with CCLGuy99, that kids want to go to St. Laurence because they have it really going on... unlike SR? SL has been so much more successful than Rita? One winning season last year, but four losing teams prior to that. Who plays the tougher schedule? Three years ago (2013) the 8th graders weren't impressed with SR's 55-14 win over SL, or their 37-14 win over PC, or their 31-19 win over Loyola? Or their 9-1 record prior to losing to MC in the playoffs by five points? MC was the only team to beat them that year. I really don't think it's about football.Actually SR had losing seasons in '12 and '15 so that is 2 of the last 4 and this year will be 3 of 5 .
Todd is nothing but a class act and great advocate/recruiter for SR, but they need to get someone with a true of
The best people to ask are parents and kids who picked other CCL schools over SR. I'm sure there are some on this board so what made SR fall short in your eyes? My guess is location, but would be interesting to hear from those who actually had to make the decision.
I'm not so sure it's location. If you look at the Rosters of MC, BR and Rita, the Mustangs seem to be getting the majority of kids from Beverly. Parishes like CK, Barnabas and Fisher used to be hot for MC, and would send a lot of the rest to Rice and Marist. I can't tell what kids Marist is getting, as they don't have their roster listed on the school website, and therefore don't have parishes listed. But to me, it looks like Rita has really cut into what was at least part of the heart of MC's 80s and 90s success. While MC still does get a handful of football players from that area, they have gone even further by getting even more kids from the outer parts, from Francis Ward Xavier, to NWI, to Orland, and the Near Western suburbs, and all parts in between. Rice seems to be following this method too, getting kids from places it never got them from, namely what are now black suburbs. I'd say Marist is in on that as well.
The idea that Naz is grabbing a handful of kids from west of Midway isn't that crazy of an idea, as it's probably just as close as 79th and Western. St. Laurence is grabbing kids too, but I would venture to guess that given the composition of the team, Blackmon is probably getting kids from right up 79th St, in Leo and Rita territory, along with kids from Burbank, and some of the other Southwest Suburbs. They also have quite a basketball staff and their head coach is probably drawing on his own roots (near western suburbs) as well as counting on people like Sexton and Treacy to pull from the backyard as well. What's clear from Rita's basketball team is that the coach has shunned going after neighborhood kids from traditional SR parishes and gone after kids from east of the school.
I don't know if Rita going to the closed LW is the answer. Would the Augs want two schools in such close proximity to one another? Given that far out location, too, Rita would lose 80% of the kids that they have now because of the distance.
The way I see things, and this is just my opinion and developed anecdotally without any hard data, is that all of the areas surrounding Rice will be completely changed within 20 years. That changes the outlook for Rice and would put them into Leo territory in terms of demographics. And with Rice, assuming that Rita doesn't make any big moves locationally, they will both be in the same boat.
Whereas SI is ideally situated, MC is in a neighborhood that is headed up (U of C expansion and easy access from all parts off of Lake Shore Dr.
Marist being co-ed and being the only real option for kids in places like Orland and Palos, will probably sustain these same changes. It's hard to say and all very speculative. But everything on the far South Side is in transition right now and with the city cutting so many of the old jobs that fed neighborhoods that sent kids to Catholic Schools, it's all up in the air.
I am not a Rita alum, but know many, including a few who are very well wired into their alma mater. First, these things go in waves so likely this perceived lower point for SR will likely pass. But, they key to the success of today's Catholic education is $$$. They can only charge so much for tuition. MC and SR always had an edge and could overcome their neighborhood locations with deep pocketed alums who could write big checks to the endowment to help draw kids with academic scholarships. Note I did not write athletic scholarships. They all know better than to award anything officially in the name of athletics per the IHSA rules. MC still keeps getting the $$. SR is losing ground in the $$ race. Fr. Tom McCarthy is no longer the Principal of St. Rita HS. He is now in a leadership position with the Augustinian Order which means he is working for broader Augustinian needs, not just SR. He is a phenomenal fundraiser and could always get that big donation to tide them over. Also, one guy cannot hold three, let alone four key leadership positions and do any one of them well. Case in point - recently, Mike Zunica was named President when Fr. Tom moved on. He was also named AD and Head of Admissions/recruiting and kept the head baseball coach position until they just named his successor there. The order also had to outbid/outspend the Leo alumni to get the former Quigley South property. The age of that property is catching up to them. SR has done well with a redo of the football field, the new wing off the west entrance, the baseball field upgrades, etc. so they are keeping up facility-wise for now. Unless they find some academic or other niche to differentiate themselves, it will be a continued challenge keeping the numbers up on 79th. SR just needs to get back on track.
MC is situated nicely SE on the lake. Area will only get better with the Library.
I'm not so sure it's location. If you look at the Rosters of MC, BR and Rita, the Mustangs seem to be getting the majority of kids from Beverly. Parishes like CK, Barnabas and Fisher used to be hot for MC, and would send a lot of the rest to Rice and Marist. I can't tell what kids Marist is getting, as they don't have their roster listed on the school website, and therefore don't have parishes listed. But to me, it looks like Rita has really cut into what was at least part of the heart of MC's 80s and 90s success. While MC still does get a handful of football players from that area, they have gone even further by getting even more kids from the outer parts, from Francis Ward Xavier, to NWI, to Orland, and the Near Western suburbs, and all parts in between. Rice seems to be following this method too, getting kids from places it never got them from, namely what are now black suburbs. I'd say Marist is in on that as well.
The idea that Naz is grabbing a handful of kids from west of Midway isn't that crazy of an idea, as it's probably just as close as 79th and Western. St. Laurence is grabbing kids too, but I would venture to guess that given the composition of the team, Blackmon is probably getting kids from right up 79th St, in Leo and Rita territory, along with kids from Burbank, and some of the other Southwest Suburbs. They also have quite a basketball staff and their head coach is probably drawing on his own roots (near western suburbs) as well as counting on people like Sexton and Treacy to pull from the backyard as well. What's clear from Rita's basketball team is that the coach has shunned going after neighborhood kids from traditional SR parishes and gone after kids from east of the school.
I don't know if Rita going to the closed LW is the answer. Would the Augs want two schools in such close proximity to one another? Given that far out location, too, Rita would lose 80% of the kids that they have now because of the distance.
The way I see things, and this is just my opinion and developed anecdotally without any hard data, is that all of the areas surrounding Rice will be completely changed within 20 years. That changes the outlook for Rice and would put them into Leo territory in terms of demographics. And with Rice, assuming that Rita doesn't make any big moves locationally, they will both be in the same boat.
Whereas SI is ideally situated, MC is in a neighborhood that is headed up (U of C expansion and easy access from all parts off of Lake Shore Dr.
Marist being co-ed and being the only real option for kids in places like Orland and Palos, will probably sustain these same changes. It's hard to say and all very speculative. But everything on the far South Side is in transition right now and with the city cutting so many of the old jobs that fed neighborhoods that sent kids to Catholic Schools, it's all up in the air.
With all due respect, you are incorrect about SR and deep pocketed alums. SR has more deep pocketed alums now. But, SR was traditionally a much more blue collar and working class school than BR or Marist, and didn't have nearly the money of those schools. When I went to SR in the early 90s, I was teased for being a rich boy from Evergreen Park. SR kids considered BR and Marist to be schools with alot of money.
SR had much less money than BR or Marist for scholarships, and these alleged scholarships were not why SR was successful. SR's success throughout the first decade of the 2000's was because (i) after MC, they have the most storied football program in the Catholic League and kids wanted to be part of that tradition; (ii) there was not much concern about concussions and most boys still played football -- so even if there were only 220 boys in the frosh class, 90-100 went out for football; (iii) there were more kids going to Catholic School than there are now; and (iv) there were still a few star athletes (such as Wade Weyer) from nearby grammar schools such as St. Denis; there are almost no such kids now.
The area around BR has supposedly
Well, we see it differently. A lot of those blue collar guys who went to Rita went on to be very successful and were very generous to their alma mater. When the doors have been opened since 1905, that was a hell of a head start v. the schools that opened in the 50s and 60s. There were generous alums helping SR and MC while the younger schools were just getting their alumni maturing to be able to give anything substantial. Now those younger school alumni oldest classes and years since are hitting their peak earnings and now have retirees and those who can now afford to give are doing so, but that is a very recent element - within the last 10 years max for the younger schools. I was told by my well-wired SR alum friend that the many of the very generous alums have sadly died off and the school can't get the big checks from the others like they used to. Without Fr. Tom and Ernie Mrozek to go out and get those donations on a regular basis is having its impact. Again, I too mean no disrespect, but to try to say that SR never had the support of very generous alums is a little tough to agree with. Regardless, I think we agree that $$ or lack thereof are the key.