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Congrats to Camron Rust
Camron will be working the Oregon State Tourney this season. Congrats Cam!
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Congrats...first one?
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No, it's not his first one. And I'm certain it won't be his last! |
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Agreed
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Props to Camron! |
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For Oregon, there's a 2-phased approach to voting for a tourney bid. First there is a vote among all the "Regular" membership of the association. There are 3 types of members: Probationary, Associate, and Regular. Once you achieve Regular status, you are eligible to work varsity. To get to be a Regular member, you either get awarded it by the comissioner if he thinks you're ready, or you automatically get it after 5 years in the association.
All Regular members get to vote for who gets to go to the tourney from the entire list of Regular members. Someone will correct me, but I think you get to vote for up to 25 members in the first vote. Then the top 70 are put on the second ballot. Of those 70, the Regular members then get to vote for at least 10 but no more than 15 (I think). At this point, the varsity coaches all get to vote as well. Here's where it gets fishy. From all those votes, the coaches votes are counted as 1 point each. And a Regular member vote counts as some percentage of one vote. It's based on how many of each types of votes there are (there are always a lot more Regular member votes than coaches votes). It's disturbing that coaches votes count for so much more than the association (peer) votes. Usually only the better school's coaches vote regularly (since they are the ones more likely to even get to the state tourney) and not everyone gets to work at those better schools, so the coaches votes can be very skewed. This makes it difficult for up-and-comers to break into the state tourney. I had always been against the votes counting differently - I think all the votes should count as 1 point - forget the percentages. It's been a point of contention in the association. The old timers and top echelon want to keep it the way it is because they benefit from it. But the up-and-comers see it as unfair. Who knows if it will ever change. Camron can explain the process in more detail as to how the percentage for membership votes gets determined. That's it in a nutshell, though. |
Tjones goes both ways!
Working both girls and boys tourney in the great state of Illinois.
Congrats Tanner. |
Thanks Smitty! Coaches should never be allowed to vote for the officials. I wonder how coaches would like it if we (officials) could vote for them?:D
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Congrats to Camron!! Knock'em dead.... best of luck and have fun!!
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As for the coaches votes....Basically, if 100 officials vote and 33 coaches vote, the weight is 3x to give the body of coaches the same total weight as the body of officials. In some years, an individual coach's vote has counted 4x the officials vote. This year, it was about 2x. I've pushed hard over the years to minimize the overly powerful influence of thier vote....and the primary way that it has been accomplished is to get more inolvement from the coaches. We're having record numbers of coaches participate. That reduces the value of a single coach's vote relative to the peer vote. It als minimizes the effect of a rougue coach having a dramatic impact or, even more important, lessens the value of an official "working" coaches for votes. With more coaches voting, there is less room for a on official to successfully practice that sort of behavior. |
It should also be mentioned that our own "icallfouls" has also been selected the work Oregon State Tourney....@ the 6A level (Oregeon's top classification).
This is his second trip to that level and his third tourney overall. He is a good friend and someone who has helped me tremendously over the last few years. Congrats to him. (I'll let him reveal his name if he chooses since he uses a screen name). And to answer if it was my first...no. I went in 2008 as an alternate after another official withdrew after having a work conflict come up. (In our assocation, you can't be selected 2 years in a row so no one that went in 2008 was eligible for 2009, and so forth). |
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Congrats on being selected to all. |
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One day I would like to ask the following question, though: Rather than picking the same people for the 6th or more time, wouldn't it be better to identify qualified people who never got to reach out for the brass ring to work? I mean, this is a very, very subjective business that we're in -- there's no way that someone can be SO good at this that it's a no brainer to take that person 6, 7, 8 or more times and there are people who are well qualified and do a great job on the court that it would hurt the quality of officiating to pick the person that never went. |
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I thought most States had rules like Camron describes Oregon's. I believe my state is two State Finals and you are done. You have to go back to the beginning and work 2 years at each level of the tournament before advancing to the next. It would take at least six years to get back to a State Championship game. |
Here, state (currently) is the semis and finals (and the quarterfinals in the big school division) played over the course of 3 days at the end of the season (boys play one week and girls another). If chosen, you get assigned to one game there. And that's what I was talking about.
The people that are selected are great officials, but there are other great officials who never get the call. I worked with 2 this year with over 30 years in who have dotted every i, crossed every t, and work a solid 3-person game who probably will never get chosen. And that's too bad. |
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The state (Oregon) limits officials to no more than any 2 tourneys in a 3 year period. There is no maximum. Associations can choose to select their allotment of officials any way they wish. Ours has chosen to be more restrictive than the state....no more than 1 tourney every other year. Aside from that, we have a requirement that effectively says that of our allotment of 19 officials, 6 can not have been in the last 2 years. The first 13 are chosen by vote. The other 6 are independantly selected by the commissioner regardless of their vote position....as long as they meet the other state requirements (90% on the test and have taken the state training class). Our commissioner often uses some of those 6 picks to select people like what Rich described....great officials that have just not made it through the vote after many years...but also up-an-coming officials that just haven't gotten the recognition yet. |
I Assume It's Not Basketball ...
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Boys Or Girls ???
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I'm working the state javelin catching finals. EWWWW!
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I'd like to add to Camron and Smitty's description of how officials are chosen for the State Tourneys. The process they described is how our assocation chooses the officials that we send to the tourneys.
There are six tournaments in Oregon, one per size category of schools. Associations ( I think there are 9 or 10 in Oregon) are to send a number of officials to each tourney based on the percentage of schools they serve in that size category. So our association serves about 2/5 of the 6A schools in Oregon, so we send the most officials to that size, but only two or three to some of the smaller categories where we don't serve as big a percentage as other associations. Each association chooses within themselves who to send, and different associations use different methods. |
I Think You Need To Practice More ???
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Congrats!
Congratulations to everyone who is selected to work a postseason tournament!
My postseason won't start until next Wednesday with a first round boys game. |
Does That Count ???
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Help!!!
I got selected to arbitrate the next big snowball fight at Dupont Circle in DC. There was a problem with crowd control the last go round...
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Congrats buddy. Well deserved I am sure.
Peace |
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That's colder than the icepack wrapped around my house... |
Congratulations to everyone selected to do postseason games. You all worked long & hard & deserve the recognition given for a great season.
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I have been fortunate to work at the state tournament several times and have worked several times to the Semifinals and beyond. Last season, due to several circumstances, I worked the 5A (largest classification here) boys semis with two guys who had never worked that far into the tournament before. Our pregame was interesting because one of the guys was so nervous that he could barely get dressed and the other guy was faking indifference to being in the game. Trying to deal with both of them and to get their respective heads into the game (as the R) was a challenge. One was hard enough but two took effort. They are both good guys and good refs, but neither was ready (IMO) to be there. They got a real opportunity to show what they could do on a big stage. Things turned out ok, but both coaches said something to me about who my partners were before the game started. Apparently, they like seeing the same guys when it really counts. BTW, congrats Camron! |
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BTW...if you don't mind me stating in this public forum...I heard there was a little "situation" in one of your games recently, I hope everyone is OK. You may PM me if you do not want to explain it publicly. |
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Thanks for the Compliment
Congrats to all working post season.
I was assigned 2 post season games. Both are in the Districts assignments. These are the beginning of post season. Here is a response to me from someone when I informed him of my assignment. "No disrespect intended to anyone that gets district assignments but it is clearly one of the worst processes that there is. Because you get district assignments clearly does not mean that you are a quality official. I have seen them pick dead people, I have seen them pick people that haven't lived in Missouri for at least 5 years etc. It is a flawed process.":eek: |
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Congrats Cameron and Tjones... |
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Congrats, Cameron! :)
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