smootharch wrote:I am not campaigning for him right now. I am smart enough to know that this "Executive Board" would not change their mind. I just wanted to bring to light how ridiculous I think it is.
I've been involved with lifeguard races (running, swimming, paddleboarding, rowing, and surf-skiing, in various combinations, usually to simulate rescues) for many years. A large number of tournaments have "rules" consisting of one page with a vague description of each event, while the tournament that I was involved with running had rather substantial rulebooks that explained exactly what the rules were and what the penalties for violating the rules were.
The number of people complaining about getting screwed at our tournament was always lower because people knew what was expected. (Of course, all of the tournaments had their shares of complaints about the actual judging, but that's different.)
As an example, at one of these other tournaments, for the boat relay we were told that we had to bring our boat all the way onto dry sand before the next leg could start, but the team next to us did all of their exchanges in the water; when we protested, they said, "Well, it's not really written down that you have to touch the boat to dry sand, so we're going to let it go."
Why do I bring all of this up? Well, some people like the chaos of no rules. In some cases, that's because they want to try to take advantage of the lack of rules to help them win, and in some cases because they don't believe the extra level of fairness is worth the effort. But, in general, the more serious people are about what they do, the more structured they want the rules, because if you're going to invest that much effort into trying to win you don't want to get screwed out of a win because there's no organizational structure. The people who were really serious liked our tournament better.
This is not to say that they always agreed with every rule. On the contrary, there were sometimes bitter debates regarding rule changes because of differing opinions. However, the overall package was preferable to the complete chaos of other tournaments.
If you look at sports in general, the highest levels of sport (NFL, NCAA, Olympics) are highly structured, with clear (usually) rules. The MDIA is for teams that want to be serious.
This is what I see in your case: you have the belief that this person should get an extra year to play (in spite of the fact that the player would not get a "medical redshirt" under NCAA rules), and since this is contrary to the rules of the MDIA, you're mocking the whole MDIA structure. But the reason teams are associated with the MDIA is that, overall, they want that structure because it brings overall fairness
even though occasionally some of those rules will hurt the team or individuals on the team.
Thus, I think it's really hypocritical to be a part of MDIA and then whine when a perfectly reasonable ruling doesn't go your way. OTOH, if your reaction was to start lobbying the executive board to adopt a clear, fair medical redshirt policy for the future, I'd be able to respect that.