<p>We’ve searched this forum a bit and found a few references to the term and the potential implications but can anyone shed some more light on what it means to be told by a coach at the Air Force Academy; “he has Blue Chipped you”. </p>
<p>Based on past posts the comments range from “the coach will help push your application through admissions” to “you’re in”. </p>
<p>Are there any other implications relative to Air Force Academy Preparatory School etc. </p>
<p>Basically thats what they mean when the term “blue chipped” is used. Being blue chipped provides a great advantage to getting into the AFA. Of course good grades, etc. must be had, but it gives an immense boost.</p>
<p>I can shoot it from the other side. Being “Blue Chipped” here at the prep means that you are a recruited athelete that may not have been competitive in other areas. We get a lot of those here: Swimming, football, soccer, wrestling, track… we get them all.</p>
<p>If you are at prep do you participate in your sport for the year you are there? I assume if you are recruited for a specific sport they would want you to stay in shape and practice?</p>
<p>For the most part, yes they do a good job of letting atheltes continue working in their sport but some, like track and field, there just aren’t enough of to get a team going. In those cases the C/Cs can request an alternative pc program that will give them a good enough workout to pass the CFA/PFT and still help them in their sport.</p>
<p>From what I understand, being blue-chipped means that the coach is strongly advocating for you to the board. The coaches only get a certain number of blue chips per year, and it’s the their way of saying, “I want this person.” </p>
<p>I think it’s one of those unofficial “in’s” … meaning they can’t officially say that you’ve been accepted, but you’re nearly guaranteed acceptance in the near future.</p>
<p>So along those lines; does Blue Chipped typically lead to a LOA or do the majority of Blue Chipped applicants move through the application process normally with the additional benifit of having a coach “advocate” on their behalf? I assume some of this depends on the visibility of the sport they play; football vs. tennis and how/if you were recruited directly by the coach.</p>
<p>I am not sure, I know that the majority of the freshman on my tennis team that were blue-chipped got LOA’s, but we also had really good academic composite scores. There were some that just got normal accpetance letters as well</p>