[NSRCA-discussion] Points system
Bob Richards
bob at toprudder.com
Tue Aug 14 10:36:08 AKDT 2007
If a person finished 1st or 2nd at every contest, and there were only 3 people in the class, there is not as much of a need for this person to advance. OTOH, if this person consistently finished 1st out of 20, I'd say it is time for this person to move up. Isn't that the way the point system is structured now?
Bob R.
Ken Thompson <mrandmrst at comcast.net> wrote:
Point system or not, if someone is finishing in the top 1 or 2 at every local event, it's time to move up. And like you said, the heckling would be unbearable ;-)
Ken
----- Original Message -----
From: Mark Atwood
To: NSRCA Mailing List
Sent: Tuesday, August 14, 2007 11:13 AM
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Points system
You must have missed my earlier post...copied here...
Why do we have one? (point system)
Not to play devils advocate but do we really have that many people trying to cheat to take home an extra plaque? Yeah, some people hang around a class a little longer than others, but I dont ever recall someone staying beyond the point where peer pressure failed, and we had to rely on an un-enforced point system to get the job done.
I mean lets face it...if theres a guy just tearing up the advanced circuit...winning everything in his path, A) hes going to get pretty bored with that at some point B) hes going to get heckled to DEATH at some point from the Masters guys calling him chicken since hes clearly afraid to compete against kids his own size :) and C) and this is a big C... Who cares?? If Im flying Advanced against him and continually having my A$$ handed to me...then apparently theres room for my flying to improve. I can choose to improve it staying in Advanced until either the aforementioned sandbagger moves up and I can claim victory with my inferior flying against now inferior competition, OR I can choose to bypass all together and move to Masters and get a new challenge having never won the pinnacle of the previous class, but feeling confident in my own abilities.
MORE importantly...if I fly for fun? Which I really think about 50% of the flyers in pattern do, then I can hang at whatever level challenges me, provides me with the best reward level for my time and investment, and maximize my fun.
I think the point system should be little more than a guideline for the avid competitor whos goal is to move through the classes, gain proficiency, and whos target is winning in FAI. Its a guideline to know when its maybe time to move up, to prevent moving too early, and yet stay on a good course for becoming the best.
For the rest, I think its a non issue.
Im an avid golfer...I suck, but Im avid. My handicap says I should be playing from the blue tees on most courses... But on a given day, Id much rather go out and shoot an 82 from the whites, than post an 86 from the Blues. Just my preference...its more fun.
My .02
-Mark
---------------------------------
On 8/14/07 11:16 AM, "twtaylor" <twtaylor at ftc-i.net> wrote:
Just to break this issue out to a thread of its own. Maybe we can keep this one on topic.
Any ideas on a better system?
---------------------------------
_______________________________________________
NSRCA-discussion mailing list
NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion
---------------------------------
_______________________________________________
NSRCA-discussion mailing list
NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion_______________________________________________
NSRCA-discussion mailing list
NSRCA-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
http://lists.nsrca.org/mailman/listinfo/nsrca-discussion
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://lists.nsrca.org/pipermail/nsrca-discussion/attachments/20070814/57ae9795/attachment.html
More information about the NSRCA-discussion
mailing list