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On Sep 23, 11:35*am, toad wrote:
But long time pilots that fly low level equipment must be able to win, if they are flying the best at that contest. Todd - This is where I probably break from the pack and earn a few enemies: I completely disagree with you on this. I used to make the same argument you are using, back in my auto-racing days. I fought mightily for rules to allow anyone with any budget to have an equal shot at winning. And as someone who's worked in the games and entertainment industry I also used to strive for that kind of equality in things like collectible card games where more money can make a big difference... But the bottom-line is that I've never ever seen a successful program that makes someone's budget irrelevant. And many of the attempts to do so have been big failures that have had negative impacts on the whole sport or competition that they were designed to help. I'm all for simple and reasonable efforts to make the competition fair - but there's no way to make it 100% level across all equipment and to force the guy with the fat wallet to compete with no more advantage than the guy on a shoestring - and I say this as someone who's usually competing on a shoestring! :-P The "Nimbus 3 vs. ASK-14" thing is ridiculous. People love to make comparisons like this, but again this is a SPORT and this is COMPETITON; at a National level in some of these cases/arguments. If you put a high value on winning then you need to make the sacrifices and choices in your life to compete at the highest possible level. If you cannot compete at the absolute top level because of your budget, then you do the best you can and you take the satisfaction that you can get out of doing more with less... But screwing up the majority of the racers just so a couple of people at the lowest level can theoretically do better than people at the highest levels is wrong. Don't target the slim majority at the top OR the bottom - target the middle and upper-middle ranges, the majority of your competitors. If they're reasonably competitive against each other, then your system is doing what it is supposed to do. Look at an individual sport like Bowling or Golf: Do you really think that the handicap there makes everyone play at the same level? What about the guy who can afford better clubs or a custom-drilled bowling- ball? Does the handicap take that into account? No! There are plenty of other examples of this, in sports that are highly successful and have plenty of participation... These "unfair" sports haven't stopped rookies from trying the sport or attempting to move up in skill and equipment over time - why should it stop glider pilots? The problem is that the handicapping should really depend on the weather conditions, a single number handicap only works well within a small range of handicaps. *Especially for a weather driven sport. Except that the exact combination of weather conditions is always changing and never exactly identical. That's one of the reasons this sport is so challenging, afterall! So how do you come up with standards or metrics on something like that? And don't think that it only matters for gliders with hugely different performance numbers... My DG-300 came with big ballast bags; does that mean I should have a worse handicap than a DG-300 with small ballast bags on strong days? Or what if specific conditions favor a DuoDiscus over a DG-1000? Or a DG-1000T over a Duo X but NOT a DG-1000 over a standard Duo? How finely do you want to slice this, and how insanely complicated do you end up making the rules as a result? I return to my original argument: You handicap to give folks in various equipment with equivalent skills a SHOT at doing well. And you hold the competition over multiple days to try to average out the weather and the luck factor - that's the way its ALWAYS been (even before handicapped classes). Take care, --Noel |
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