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Here is the question on Sam's blog: "Would an East Coast Nationals-West
Coast Nationals increase attendance in national contest?" There is no reference to a document about just how this would be carried out. Rules committee members have to draft a rule(s) with specifics concerning pilot ranking, national champion selection, team selection, etc., etc. It's easy for those of us not shouldered with the responsibility of writing rules to toss out cute sound bites, but a rules committee member needs to have more than a cool idea to be an effective member of our excellent rules committee. Having been part of organizing 18 regional and national contests over the last 16 years and thus working with the SSA site selection committee, it is obvious that the US does not have enough contest sites to adequately find a home each year for the seven classes we now offer. Over the 40 years that I have been competing the number of sites willing to take on the job has shrunk from dozens to a handful. Who is going to sponsor these new contests (6 FAI and 1-26)? Question for Sam: Can you provide the voters with the necessary details for this concept? Rules committee members are basically doing lawyer work and need specifics. Karl Striedieck "Sam Giltner" wrote in message ... www.5ugly.blogspot.com |
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On Sep 25, 10:52*pm, Sam Giltner wrote:
www.5ugly.blogspot.com This is an interesting way to get feedback, and a useful one. It does need, however, carefully worded questions with fair background info. The RC spends a great deal of time trying to write fair and balanced questions and still sometimes misses the right way to ask the questions. Background is also critical to meaningful responses. Example: The Tuesday topic started with(parphasing here) the statement that "Fact-competition participation is at and all time low" leading to the "obvious" conclusion that we need "change"- there's that word again. Data I gathered from 1 lunch time review(data from contest reports and seeding lists) to study how accurate that assertion is showed the following: Year 2000 23 sanctioned contests- 621 entries- 501 pilots on the ranking list Year 2004 23 sanctioned contests-696 entries- 636 pilots on the ranking list Year 2007 20 sanctioned contests- 609 entries- 594 pilots on the ranking list Year 2008 21 sanctioned contests- 620 entries(includes 40 for upcoming R4N)- ranking list pending. My conclusion is that the assertion supporting Ths Blog question was grossly in error which leads to the question of what meaningful result can come from the response. Please look at UH response to a previous message related to what we can do to retain and increase participation. With respect to the pilot handicapping idea- maybe some kind of pilot handicap is appropriate for informal competitions, but I personally(all these points are my views only) don't think you pick meaningful champions this way. They don't handicap Tiger at the Masters. East coast/West coast "nationals"- Those are really regional competitions that should(in my view) not hold the rank and prestige of nationals. I pointed out a few other concerns in a previous post. I will be adding this topic to the agenda for the November RC meeting. Let's hear from some other folks. UH |
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On Sep 26, 5:32*am, wrote:
snip East coast/West coast "nationals"- Those are really regional competitions that should(in my view) not hold the rank and prestige of nationals. I pointed out a few other concerns in a previous post. I will be adding this topic to the agenda for the November RC meeting. Let's hear from some other folks. UH As a practical matter we have East/West coast nationals today - they just run in alternate years instead of the same year. If I recall correctly, the number of pilots who cross the Mississippi to attend a contest is quite small - and my gut feel is that it has fallen over the past 30 years. For instance, a 15M nationals at Mifflin will be attended predominantly by pilots who live in eastern states and one at Montague will be attended mostly by pilots who live in western states. I suspect the higher you are likely to be on the scoresheet the more willing you will be to travel a long distance for WGC team selection, etc. But high gas prices plus the constraints on people's vacation options make it unlikely that you will ever have broad attendance from both coasts. So how do various alternatives affect what we are trying to accomplish with national championships? I believe the goals should be: A) Select national champions in each class each year, B) Select a WGC team, C) For the 90+% who don't fall into A or B, to provide a robust forum for pilots to compete at the highest level - which depends on having a field of high-quality competitors that is a big as can be accomodated. I think there are "official" objectives in the rules somewhere. My personal view is that if there isn't a nationals on the side of the country where they live pilots typically pursue one of three alternatives: 1) attend a regional (or super-regional) contest that is closer to home, 2) fly in a nationals for a different class (Std - 15M, 15M - 18M, 18M - Open, or any of the above to Sports), 3) sit it out (I don't know the numbers, but this would be the most worrisome). The idea of a East/West nationals doesn't seem to satisfy any of the three objectives very well. I think the result will be twice as many national contests of roughtly half the size (maybe a bit bigger if the number of pilots pursuing strategies 1 and 3 exceed the number of pilots pursuing strategy 2) East/west nationals confuse the idea of a national champion. They dilute our ability to choose a team because they compress the seeding by having more contests with fewer competitors. Finally, I think having small nationals significantly diminishes the experience for everyone from the top of the scoresheet to the bottom. What are our alternatives - I have a couple of ideas. 1) Ensure that nationals for adjacent classes are on opposite sides of the country so the maximum number of pilots have a chance to compete in a Nationals each year. The placement of Sports and 18M seem to be the most critical to me as the are the relief valves for a lot of Std and 15M pilots. I think the Open Class guys are in a bit of a bind because they only have Sports and I don't think it's a very good forum for ships that big. 2) Re-evaluate how we set maximum seeding points top to bottom. I think you could come up with a formula based on the number of pilots and the average seeding of, say, the top 8 or 10. This also eliminates the need to go through an administrative procedure to declare a regionals "super" or not - if you get enough top pilots the maximum seeding points allocated goes up on a continuous scale. The benefit in this context is that if you can have a regional contest each year in the east and the west AND you can get a national-caliber group of pilots to fly, you can get near-national level seeding out of your performance. I think Parowan and Perry fall into this category today. 3) Increase the ability to combine adjacent classes in regionals, with some handicapping if necessary. This is on the ballot and proposal 2) above creates some additional incentive to do so in practice. Reactions welcome... 9B |
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