With that being said, any football (or basketball) player that tries to do engineering is borderline crazy. I remember when Carleton Scott tried engineering... that lasted all of a semester I think. Couldn't make any group meetings or find study time and I think he had a 1.something GPA when he dropped it for A&L. There are simply not enough hours in the day to do both a revenue sport with all of its commitments and engineering. So considering that, Notre Dame is a good bet because of the other alternatives to engineering if he finds the workload too much. There are lots of athletes who do it... but I'm really struggling to think of a football/basketball player in my years there that made it all the way through.
All this, but ESPECIALLY the bolded. I hate to be such a cynical a-hole, but when I hear that a recruit is interested in engineering, I am tempted to roll my eyes. There were two players who graduated from ND with engineering degrees either just before I arrived or they were seniors when I was a freshman (and one was damn good: Jabari Holloway, a tight end who played in the NFL for a couple of years) ... but they are the only ones I can think of, and the examples of players who started out in engineering and then dropped out are LEGION. It is really hard to find the time to play big-time football and do engineering.
And honestly, the same goes for non-athlete students ... it's just really freaking hard. I knew MANY who started in engineering and were in Mendoza or A&L by the start of their sophomore year. I've said it before on this board: I'd estimate that 70% of the people I met in my first week at ND told me they were aiming to do either engineering or pre-med. (I specifically remember this because, as a guy who was always exclusively interested in the humanities, I was really disappointed at how much trouble I was initially having meeting people with similar interests, lol.) I'd estimate that less than half of those remained in engineering or pre-med past their freshman year. It is VERY common for students to be interested in those fields and then realize that they aren't as smart as they thought they were and, even if they can avoid failing out, it doesn't make sense to pull all those all-nighters for a 2.0 GPA or worse. When even students with nothing else going on in their lives are deciding that engineering is too much, what chance do the football players have?
So, the point is this: Lax articulated a GREAT argument for going to ND ... it may be true that if you want to major in pre-med or engineering, your degree from Big State School X is just fine ... but what if you get to college and you realize that you DON'T want to major in pre-med or engineering? (and that happens ALL the time, even to people who aren't struggling academically. I knew one guy who was acing the pre-engineering calculus, but ended up deciding to major in ND's Great Books program, just because that's what he was interested in.) There are so many great programs at ND, and even if your intended major doesn't work out, you'll end up in something worthwhile. Or even if you don't, the ND name just means something to people and will open doors for you; it has certainly opened a lot of random doors for me in my professional life. Maybe it's just me, but I think ND is always the smart move ...