Blade wrote:HSHoops wrote:<How has the new rule made it easier for AD's to police?>
Because it's no longer in effect..... thought that was self explanatory.
The rule was outdated...no need to change the punishment - changing the rule was the right call.
Please post a link to the complet rule if you have one. I guess I am lost as to what this covers and what it doesn't.
This is all I find
"Arguably the most significant change is to the Rules of Eligibility. It liberalizes the language addressing school teams assembling out-of-season during the school year. The new language permits student-athletes to assemble during the school year at any time outside the season for practice or competition as long as the school and/or school coach are not involved. The amendment received membership approval by a 258-72 vote. "
The old rule said that teams "could not resemble" the high school team during out of season competition. So if a group of girls basketball players wanted to play in a tournament in the spring, they "couldn't resemble" the actual high school team. Problem was, what does that mean? Does that mean add one non-high school team player (someone who doesn't play at all, or maybe someone from a different school?)? Does it mean more than half? What does that mean?
At one point the WIAA tried to quantify it by saying that no more than 60% of the team and 60% of the players on the court/field at any point could be from the same school. But that placed the onus of compliance on kids, on untrained and perhaps rules-uneducated volunteers or parents; the schools had no way to be involved in it to make sure it wasn't happening or that it was being followed. After a year or two of that 60% rule, they just changed it back to "cannot resemble", which again left all kinds of ambiguity.
The other thing is that it was virtually unenforcable. Let's say a team DID have all high school players on it. How do you prove it? Is a witness statement enough? Then anyone could say they saw them doing it and it's the Wild West. Basically unless the WIAA had visual proof or someone admitted/self-reported it, they couldn't do anything about it. In my four years here and many years following high school sports previously, I don't recall a single example of a team/player being suspended or disciplined, because it was so hard to actually prove.
Again, the rule was hard to define, hard to prove, hard to enforce, and limited what athletes could freely do. Long overdue change in my opinion.
And to clarify, the rules are the same for head coaches and assistant coaches -- they cannot be involved in games/tourneys/practices in any way and they cannot be mandatory.
The five summer contact days that were referenced earlier have been in place for several years now for basketball, that isn't something new.
Brock Michael Wilson -- 6/30/2011; 9 lbs, 13 oz & 21 in
10/22/2010 -- 598,210 pageviews for WSN
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