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In our discussions here on whether or not too add Club Class to the
list of competitions held in the U.S., the main sticking point seems to be the effect on adding a burden to place yet another contest at dwindling contest sites. This should be a real concern for all classes, not just if we add Club Class to the mix. Just finding sites to hsot the current 7 classes is tricky and often fraught with overtones of snobbery (i.e. why would Open 's ever fly with World Class...) If it makes sense to burden the Contest Site Comittee with placing an Open Class and World Class National Championship that generally average between 5-15 truely in-class gliders, then why is Club Class being discriminated against when it may only have 11 or more gliders? Maybe Club would attract more than that - maybe much more. Then which classes look untennable? The facts are this: There are fewer and fewer contest sites willing and able to host a nationals, fewer and fewer contest organizers who are willing to put in the effort to continue sites or establish new sites, and fewer and fewer new contest pilots being attracted to competition, let alone higher competion. We need to change the current paradigm. If may offer the Rules Committee a proposal for consideration in future years: I beleive we need to re-structure the US contest scene to make it possible to nurture the new contest pilot at the regional level, add to the luster of some large, already largely established super-regionals, and provide for better/more attractive racing at the highest levels. Here are my thoughts - fire away, my flame shields are up and running... 1) Consider the mandatory siting of two contests per contest site each year (i.e. Open/18-m, 15-m/Std, Sports/Club, 1-26/World) 4 contest sites needed each year - down from a possible 7 or 8, if we add Club Class - Yes, the "farmer and rancher" may not get along, but wouldn't completely full contests go a long way to making the organizers view the immense effort as more justified AND toward getting a true national champion from pilots who have had to truely qualify to get in? Contests need a large enough critical mass for success, both $- wise and competition-wise, THis may be one way to assure that going forward. - Along with this, possibly increase the number of pilots at any one site from 65 to 70, and then give priority entry to 35/35 of each class until the priority deadline, then take those on the waiting list from the highest ranked competitors? - Even if we add Club Class, we actually decrease the numbers of nationals that have to find homes each year from 7 now to 4. - Plus, it would mean that the top 35 pilots (more or less) in any one class must be ranked high enough to gain entry into Nationals, which after all is a prestige event, and deliver a true national champion (i.e. there are no more "scrubs" because those pilots have other venues open to them for high-level competition (i.e. Super Regional Championships - see below) 2) Consider establishing an official Eastern Regional Championship and a Western Regional Championship. - Two super regionals like this already exist (Parowan (West) and Perry (East) and you could throw in some bids by Mifflin, Montague, etc. to move the super-regional around the regions. - For ease of scoring and organizing: These super-regionals might have the same combined classes as are sited at nationals, only run them handicapped such as may happen with 15-Std regional classes now. - The numbers become a little tricky with a 65 (or even a little higher) glider cap, but I bet this concept would ensure chock-full contests of whatever size for the two sites named each year. 3) On top of sacctioning the above two concepts of nationals or national-type competitions, consider awarding contest sites the right to hold all four nationals each four year period (for example). I.e. if the next four year cycle awarded contest to Mifflin, Montague, Uvalde, and Albert Lea, the organizers of these contest sites would commit to hosting all four nationals over the next four years. - This might encourage new organizations to get in the game if they know their huge efforts to get in the game inthe first place would be rewarded with multiple, ongoing nationals. - For existing contest organizers this might provide some certainty that they will be able to host a nationals for the next four years and encourage contest organizations to hold together for mor ethan one year. - The concpet here is to make our racing a circuit that is fixed in four year (or whtever is palatable) increments. 4) Restrict existing Regional Contests to in-region competitors, or at a minimum give super priority to in-region comeptitors regardless of pilot ranking in all classes. AND then maybe give regionals organizers the opportunity to test new concepts like multiple weekends or multiple contest sites to name a regional champion. - The regional level is where the many classes we alrady have makes things tricky. What classes are organizers going to host? It might just be left to the contest organizers to determine as entries come in. Or organizers can host what they want. Or they could mimick super regionsl type-classes (i.e. two merged with handicapped scoring ine ach of the merged classes). RC, please give the current structure of our Nationals, Super- Regionals, Regionals a good look and see if we can't tweak or make wholesale changes in the structure to acehieve what I think we all want: 1) Good Fun, Comraderie and Racing 2) Rationale contest options (i.e. Montague is not a good option for most east coast pilots, nor is MIfflin for Western pilots) 3) Opportunity for Newbies and clear ladder to higher level competition for newbies 4) Truely meaningful races for National Championships 5) The best National Team selections possible - hopefully leading to a new US World Champion Sincerely and respectfully submitted, Tim McAllister EY |
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