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More on the A-11
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rip a-11.
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Don't be so quick my little chickadees...looks like the truly American "solution" may be on the horizon...HIRE A LAWYER!
http://blogs.sfweekly.com/thesnitch/...uarterback.php Steve Humphries is facing 4th-and-very, very long. A few years back, the San Francisco mortgage broker devised a football offense that forever altered the prevailing paradigm of who the head cheerleader is supposed to date. Humphries and fellow Piedmont High School football coach Kurt Bryan's A-11 offense features two quarterbacks -- and 11 eligible receivers. To keep the high school motif going, think of it as the shotgun spread offense x 1023. In two seasons employing the offense, Piedmont -- a small, suburban school in an affluent East Bay community best known for its annual bird-calling exhibition on The Tonight Show and David Letterman (and Arsenio, that one year) -- won 15 games and lost only five. This year, the team went 8-2 and scored 33 points per game. Articles about the distinctive A-11 offense (that stands for "All 11" as in everyone is eligible to catch a pass) appeared in the Washington Post, New York Times, and ESPN Magazine. Naturally, High School sports' governing body is leaning toward banning it. The National Federation of State High School Associations' rules committee met last month and is expected to release its rules changes for the 2009 seasion -- which were decided by secret vote -- sometime in the next week. Humphries said he thinks his offensive system's chances of survival are "50-50." But he talks like a man who knows the score when he angrily sums up the governing body as "A bunch of traditionalists." Ironically, Humprhies' response to being dealt the black spot by the governing body may well be the traditional Piedmont reaction to being handed a setback -- call a lawyer. He told SF Weekly he may file a suit and seek "a federal injunction" -- and, truly, there is no shortage of lawyers in Piedmont. Less bombastically, he postulated that Piedmont may secede from the NFSH and play in an independent -- and A-11 friendly -- league, or even work with the governing body to form a "sub-federation" of A-11 teams (there are quite a few around the nation now, including Mission High here in the city). When asked if the school really felt it was worth seceding or filing suit rather than just going back to a traditional offense and appeasing the governing body, Humphries said school principal Randy Booker was 100 percent behind him. Booker hasn't yet returned SF Weekly's call. But it would make sense. The A-11 offense, like the bird calling contest, has gotten Piedmont plenty of glowing press -- and it doesn't require making a jackass out of yourself on Letterman. Last edited by TXMike; Thu Feb 12, 2009 at 05:17am. |
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For all the wailing, shouting, threatening and begging that happens on sidelines all over, not very many considered rulings ever get changed. Desparate and stubborn people will do what desparate people do, not matter how unsuccessful all their finagaling is.
As has been observed long ago, many times over, those responsible for the rules of the game must be painfully aware of this controversey and are expected to respond to it, one way or the other. That decision is expected shortly, and one side or the other, will likely be unhappy with the decision. There may be resulting wailing, shouting, threatening and begging, but it will likely suffer the same fate as all the "noise" that periodically rises from different sidelines. To paraphrase an old saying, "When "noise" from a sideline is simply ignored, does it make any sound?" |
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Yes, let's get the legal system involved...over high school football. Give me a break.
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Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers |
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I'm not sure about the Piedmont area, but all he has to do to run this goofy offense is play in an 8-man league. Down here we have a few teams with small enrollments that do just that. But that would involve acting like adults rather than stomping ones feet and insisting to get ones way.
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Well how about that? An opening within the rules KB can "exploit" to form his new league. All he has to do is get them all to play 8 man and the problem is solved. Odds on that happening? Anyone? Anyone?
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