Quote:
Originally Posted by rainmaker
No, it keeps them from having all-varsity for 7 years. They get SOME varsity after 4 years.
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Don't drink the kool-aide. Any system that rigidly enforces the one size fits all "time-in-grade" as the one we are discussing, and is not flexible enough to consider talent and the reality that not all officials develop the same or transfer with the same experience and ability, exists to protect those on top of the pecking order, who, normally, have the votes on the board to keep it in place.
One of my proudest moments when I was a first time board member in the local baseball association was to help kill a similar restriction that had been in place for years, even though I was one of the senior officials being protected.
We now evaluate all transfers and assign them to the appropriate level. Before that, we had professional umpires restricted to JV games.
We also recognize that not all officials develop at the same rate. Some might need seven years of training, growth and experience to work a full varsity level. Most don't.
There are a number of good NCAA officials who began their college career within five years of working high school ball.
As far as your argument of taking time to "dial it down", many D-1 officials concurrently work a few high school games during their season. They know how to dial it down.