According to an article written for the Hamilton Spectator, superintendants in the Hamilton Catholic board routinely ignore OFSAA regulations. The article, titled Board's policies called into question over player status mentions that the board allows players to avoid sitting out a year without transferring, even if they have not met the conditions required by the OFSAA transfer policy.
Some key quotes from the article:
He says the practise that allows an athlete transferring from one school to another being allowed to play without the one-year cooling off period is entirely up to the discretion of the superintendent, and it is not uncommon for a student to be allowed to play, with a superintendent's waiver.
The board chairman also denies allegations the superintendent overseeing athletics merely rubber-stamps transfers.
"We have a policy whereby parents, students and schools are allowed to make transfer requests to the superintendent," Daly said. "Ultimately, the superintendent makes the decision in the best interest of the student. We're not going to apologize for that."
Daly also says the board is aware that letting transfer students play in the same year is at odds with the rules set out by the Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations (OFSAA).
But he adds schools are aware that the transfer student will not be eligible to play once the school qualifies for GHAC and OFSAA.
"They know that going in," he said. "A player knows he will not be eligible to play in the playoffs."
One of the dirty secrets of high school athletics is the number of students who play right away after transferring even though they should sit out a year. It's interesting to see an article where a school board admits that they condone this. Why? What is the point of the transfer rules if a school board can simply ignore them? Saying that they cannot play in OFSAA isn't good enough. What if the team in question makes the playoffs; how should the team that just missed the playoffs feel? What about the effect on playoff seeding? What about the integrity of the regular season?
If a school board believes that the right to play takes precedence over OFSAA's attempts to prevent powerhouse programs built through recruiting then they should either pull out of their OFSAA region entirely and play among themselves only or they should lobby for a change in the OFSAA policy. Instead the board cheats.
While the Hamilton Catholic Board is the only one that is named in the article, one can be sure it isn't the only one. A lot of it is innuendo but many people believe it to be true. Look at this thread on Hooptown GTA for an example of the belief. Even some coaches claim it happens.
Some have suggested that OFSAA scrap the exceptions altogether and require every student in the province to sit out for a year if they transfer schools, regardless of the reason. Others have suggested a slightly more lenient version where a player must move a minimum distance (I.E. from one part of the province to the other; not from one part of the GTA to another as conveniently happens in some sports on a regular basis).
When one hears stories like the ones below, a stricter rule starts to make sense:
- A football team in Peel had all of its wins stripped after it was revealed that their star player was supposedly living with his coach, according to the documents used to win his transfer appeal.
- Many basketball players living in middle class suburbs around Toronto have moved to economically depressed areas where there just happen to be powerhouse basketball programs.
- A basketball player in Mississauga was called by someone who runs a scouting service and who has connections with a top ten high school program and was told that he could use the scout's home address and transfer without sitting out a year.
- An OFSAA medalist wrestler decides that she doesn't want to take the school bus when her school moves locations and is able to change to another school in her area without sitting out.
- A star basketball player on a weak team "moves" from one parent's home to another so that they can play for the best team in the region. Interestingly, the parents weren't actually separated.
- A football player at a mid-level private school changes to his local public school and wins a transfer appeal, claiming financial hardship as the reason for leaving the school (and not-coincidentally, one of the ways to avoid sitting out a year) . Strangely enough, his Dad is well-known in the financial community and had just been given a significant promotion at a major financial institution.
What do readers think about transfers in general and what other stories are out there? Please feel free to post comments or to e-mail ropssaa@gmail.com.
Also, here is a good summary of the conditions required to avoid sitting out a year, courtesy of a poster on HooptownGTA.
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Friday, September 26, 2008
General ROPSSAA Updates
Now that I am back in Peel after year out of country, near my contacts, and have more time to be on-line, I am going to return to updating this blog as often as time permits. Please feel free to post comments or to send any inside info to ropssaa@gmail.com
Here a few general updates about ROPSSAA-related issues to get the blog up and running again.
Here a few general updates about ROPSSAA-related issues to get the blog up and running again.
OFSAA Events Hosted by ROPSSAA
The updated OFSAA 3 year calendar was released earlier this month and ROPSSAA will be hosting the following events over that time period. Bear in mind that not all events have hosts and ROPSSAA might still step in late and host some of these, much as they did with AAAA Volleyball last year.
2008-09 school year
- Wrestling @ the PowerAde Centre in Brampton
- Swimming @ Etobicoke Olympium
- Girls AAAA Volleyball @ venues TBA in Mississauga
- Girls AAA/AAAA Rugby in Brampton (one assumes it will be the Brampton RFC)
- Track and Field South Regional @ location TBA (the assumption is Centennial Park in Etobicoke)
2009-10 school year
- Swimming @ Etobicoke Olympium
2010-11 school year
- Boys AAAA, AAA, AA, and A Volleyball @ locations TBA. (One assumes that such a massive undertaking will involve close to a dozen schools in Peel.)
ROPSSAA Scores Website
Last spring, ROPSSAA introduced a new website for posting and tracking scores and standings. The goal was to automatically update standings as scores were posted by coaches and to allow everyone to see scores scores around the league without waiting a day or two for an overworked convener to transcribe them into pdf format. While many coaches (and some entire schools) still cling to the old school option of calling scopres in, one hopes that eventually, the site will be the only way of posting scores.
With this web site, ROPSSAA continues to set the standard for making information about the region available on-line. While a few other regions also do a decent job of making info available (Ottawa's Fat Dog immediately comes to mind), most are still woefully inadequate. Come on folks, we're not asking for something award-winning but certainly it would serve everyone better if the various regions made some kind of effort!
2015 Pan-Am Games bids and the potential legacy for ROPSSAA
The media has been full of stories in recent weeks about the Golden Horseshoe's bid for the 2015 Pan-Am Games. Now that all levels of government are on board, the question is whether or not organizers can pull the bid together in time for next summer's bidding. From all reports, a well-organized bid is Canada's to lose.
If everyone is serious about decentralizing the bid acorss the GTA, Hamilton, and Niagara then it begs the question as to what might happen in Peel. The Hershey Centre and the PowerAde centre are already being talked about as possible venues for Volleyball, Archery, Field Hockey, Handball, according to this post on the Urban Toronto message board. Also mentioned is the possibility of an aquatic facility for swimming.
There is the potential for more much-needed, quality athletic facilities in the Peel Region, should the Games bid succeed. While some of these needs have been addressed in recent years (Hershey Centre, PowerAde centre, Hershey Sports Zone, St. Marcellinus track and field), more facilities will only help develop more quality athletes and more athletic programs accross the region. ROPSSAA has benefitted greatly from many of these facilities and could certainly use more of them. Cross your fingers for a successful bid.
That's all for this post. If anyone is interested in providing infromation for future posts, please e-mail ropssaa@gmail.com. All sources are confidential. If you enjoy this site, please make sure you pass the link on to others who might be interested.
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