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Posts Tagged ‘WIAA’

   Three years after Wiley Hesselgrave lost a chance to participate in a playoff game, the WIAA may finally change the inane rule which prevented him from appealing. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The wheels of bureaucracy turn slowly.

Three years after Coupeville High School football star Wiley Hesselgrave was shafted by an asinine rule, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association may finally change it.

Maybe.

During Senior Night against Concrete in 2015, Hesselgrave, a rock-solid guy who played the game as hard, clean, and full of passion as any Wolf ever, took a hand-off and went left, slashing for yardage.

Taken down by a tackler right in front of the press box, he was assaulted by a second Lion who launched themselves onto his prone body.

It was a blatant late hit and Concrete was flagged.

But…

Despite no evidence to support such a call, the ref ejected Hesselgrave, saying he threw a punch at a Concrete player as they got back up.

And I’m telling you, IT NEVER HAPPENED.

I’ve seen high school players throw punches, and, in one case, during an Oak Harbor girls basketball game, solidly connect, fist to chin.

Wiley didn’t even shove the Concrete player as he stood up, much less swing.

This wasn’t across the field. The entirety of the play was right smack-dab in front of me (and two former coaches who were also occupying the dilapidated old CHS press box.)

Wiley was innocent.

But the ref made a (poor) judgement call and Hesselgrave was tossed, and ejections merit an immediate one-game suspension.

Which meant no mini-playoff game the next week against Chimacum for Coupeville’s best player.

And there was nothing anyone could do about it, since WIAA rules specifically prohibit schools from appealing ejections on judgement calls by the refs.

EVEN IF YOU HAVE CRYSTAL-CLEAR VIDEOTAPE PROOF THE REF IS BLIND.

But, that may be changing.

The WIAA Representative Assembly (35 high school delegates and 19 middle school delegates) will vote on a whole new raft of amendments between April 27-May 4.

A 60% vote of approval is necessary for an amendment to pass. Those that do go into effect Aug. 1.

A lot of the possible changes are minor, or affect things which have little to no impact on Coupeville.

But ML/HS Amendment #10 wants to strike right at the heart of this doozy from the current WIAA rule book:

Ejections resulting from a judgment call by a contest official may NOT be appealed. Pictures, video evidence and/or replay recording devices may not be used.

Instead, it would be replaced with this:

Ejections resulting from a misinterpretation or misapplication on the part of the ejecting contest official(s), or a judgment call that resulted in an ejection, may be appealed.

School approved video evidence, submitted by the principal or designee, may be used to determine whether an ejection was due to judgment, misinterpretation or misapplication on the part of the ejecting contest official(s).

I understand the desire to protect refs by their association. They have a hard job as it is, and are constantly being second, third and fourth-guessed.

But not allowing schools to show video evidence, when it would prove an ejection and suspension was unwarranted, does the athletes a great disservice.

This is something which has needed to change for a very long time, and I give big props to to the Mid-Columbia Conference and the Greater Spokane League for stepping up and submitting this amendment.

In their rationale for the move, they say:

High school and middle level officials at times make mistakes in judgment that lead to the ejections of players.

To not have a source of appeal, with these decisions directly impacting student/athletes, is wrong.

If we are kid-first than we are responsible to provide DUE PROCESS, a process that increases fairness and prudency.

They also point out other states, such as Oregon, allow the use of video when appealing ejections during high school play.

And, obviously, professional and collegiate officials have existed for many years with an appeal system in place.

There is no reason Washington state high school sports should be any different.

If the ejection is valid, there would be no appeal. End of story.

But to deny a player such as Hesselgrave a chance to have an obvious correctable wrong reversed leaves a bad taste in everyone’s mouths.

Time for the WIAA to rinse, spit and embrace rightful change.

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Bring that money home. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The money is yours!

Believe in yourself, do the work, and who knows, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association could be calling your name next spring.

Working in conjunction with the Dairy Farmers of Washington and Les Schwab Tires, the WIAA is staging its sixth annual Smart Choices College Scholarship.

One female and one male high school student/athlete will each be hailed for their achievements in athletics/activities, the community, and the classroom, claiming a $5,000 college scholarship.

Even if you don’t win, there’s a second shot at sweet, sweet cash, as eight finalists will receive $1,000 scholarships.

Applications can be submitted between Nov. 1, 2017 and Apr. 1, 2018, and the WIAA website allows you to save partially finished applications as you work on them.

To be eligible, you need to answer some background questions, then write an essay or provide a personal statement video on “How you plan to use your education to benefit others.”

Judging is based on 35% athletic/activity excellence, 35% academic achievement, 15% leadership, 10% citizenship/community service, and 5% originality/creativity of the student’s essay or video.

To find out more and apply, pop over to:

http://www.wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=959

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Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

When you talk about what are arguably the two greatest pitching performances in Coupeville High School history, one fact is crystal clear today — no one is matching them in 2017.

I’m talking about Bob Rea going 16 innings and whiffing 27 Darrington batters in a 2-1 win and Ray Cook taking down 21 sluggers in a 13-inning playoff game in ’76.

And why could they not be duplicated this season?

It has nothing to do with the talent of current Wolf hurlers like Hunter Smith or Julian Welling, and all to do with a brand-new rule instituted by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

Effective immediately, no high school baseball pitcher in our state will be allowed to throw more than 105 pitches in a calendar day.

And, if they do hit that limit, or come within 29 pitches of it, they can’t pitch for the next three calendar days.

Seriously.

The days of making a run behind a true ace are gone.

Better to have a deep staff of halfway decent pitchers than one fireball-blazing stud in the “touchy-feely, can-I-encase-that-arm-in-bubble-wrap” age we’re entering.

Warm-ups pitches don’t count, but anything in the flow of the game does.

Score-book keepers will be expected to track pitch counts, with the home book the official final word, and both teams are supposed to confer after every inning to check the counts.

Umpires have no control over pitch counts.

And yes, a pitcher would have to leave in the middle of facing a hitter if he tops out.

Cue every batter in the world trying to perfect the 20-pitch at-bat, nicking foul ball after foul ball.

Violate the pitch count limits and get caught? You’re going to be smacked the same as if you got caught using an ineligible player.

Forfeit city, baby.

The limits:

76-105 pitches = 3 rest days
51-75 pitches = 2 rest days
31-50 pitches = 1 rest day
1-30 pitches = 0 rest days

So, if Smith throws 76 pitches on Mar. 15 against Chimacum, CHS can’t use him on the mound in its next two games — Mar. 17 vs. Sequim or Mar. 18 vs. South Whidbey — because he’s not eligible to pitch again until Mar. 19.

He could play in the infield, but step near the mound and the WIAA enforcement police will take him down with a dart gun.

Allegedly.

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Kailey Kellner

   Kailey Kellner (42) and the Coupeville girls have fought their way to a strong start in the state’s first RPI rankings. (John Fisken photo)

There are six varsity high school basketball teams on Whidbey Island, and one is getting a lot more respect than the other five today.

The Coupeville High School girls, who carry a 7-3 record into a game at Chimacum tonight, are ranked #15 in 1A in the first RPI rankings released by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

That puts them a solid 13 slots ahead of any other Whidbey hoops squad.

But wait, what is the RPI and why do we care, you ask?

After years of being ridiculed for the way it conducted the draw for the state basketball tourneys (spoiler: they basically pulled names out of a hat most of the time), the WIAA decided to take a step into the future.

The RPI, which is a complicated formula, which we shall (sort of) explain in a second, is supposed to fix that.

When we get down to the final 16 teams in each classification — the teams that are state-bound, like the Coupeville girls last year — the RPI rankings will be used to pair teams off for the tourney.

With 1 vs 16 and 8 vs 9, for example, the hope is to stop what has become a bad trend in recent years, where the blind draw often ended up putting 1 vs 2 or 1 vs 3 in the round of 16.

So, essentially, it’s only going to matter if you make it to state. Otherwise, it’s just another number to brag about (or not) as the season unwinds.

And, as always, playoff upsets will mean teams that finish in the top 16 don’t make it to state, while teams outside the “elite” will still earn their way to the big dance.

How do they get the rankings?

The formula uses a team’s winning percentage (25 percent), opponents winning percentage (50 percent) and opponents’ opponents winning percentage (25 percent).

You don’t get extra credit for beating teams in bigger classifications or from out of state, and the RPI is frozen at the end of the regular season.

So, you go on a run in the playoffs, it’ll punch your ticket to state, but you’ll carry in your regular season ranking with you.

The first rankings were released Friday, and from here on out will be updated daily through the end of the season.

Of course, there are going to be complaints about the RPI rankings, and one huge one centers around the WIAA getting its results from MaxPreps.

The web site, which “covers” the entire USA, is notorious for errors.

Case in point, they currently give the Coupeville boys two identical 48-37 losses to Klahowya on Dec. 9, even though only one game was obviously played.

That lowers the Wolves winning percentage, while inflating the Eagles winning percentage, both of which affect the two team’s RPI.

While it’s not as bad as earlier this year, when MaxPreps had a football score (Coupeville beating Chimacum) listed as a girls’ basketball result, it’s still irksome.

Where Whidbey’s teams sit on Day 1 of the Great RPI Experiment:

Girls:

Coupeville (#15 in 1A)
South Whidbey (#28 in 1A)
Oak Harbor (#54 in 3A)

Boys:

South Whidbey (#54 in 1A)
Coupeville (#63 in 1A)
Oak Harbor (#63 in 3A)

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Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith, starring in “Above the Law.” (John Fisken photo)

Your puny “rules” cannot contain Hunter Smith.

The Coupeville High School junior basketball sensation was named an Athlete of the Week by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association for his stellar play in his team’s recent win over Klahowya.

This, despite the fact Smith was honored four months ago, way back in week one of the 2016-2017 school year, for his play on the gridiron.

If you look at the WIAA “rules” for the award, supposedly you can only win it once in an academic year.

Rules were made to be broken…

To see Smith’s Week 16 honor, pop over to:

http://wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=961

While there, check out Week 1 and see if you recognize anyone.

And some final thoughts:

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