Legislation: Plan would disallow moving up in CIF playoffs
Barry Faulkner
BUENA PARK - The Sunset League introduced a proposal which would
ban schools from “playing up” in CIF Southern Section division playoffs
at Thursday’s section council meeting at the Sequoia Athletic Club.
If passed April 13 by the council, comprised of one representative from
each of the section’s 76 leagues, this would forbid teams, including Back
Bay powers in boys and girls volleyball and boys and girls tennis, from
seeking the best postseason competition.
Instead, all schools would be required to compete in their
enrollment-based division, regardless of the strength of their program.
Newport Harbor High boys and girls volleyball coach Dan Glenn, as well as
CdM boys tennis coach Tim Mang, have long advocated the current option to
move up to a higher division.
Newport Harbor’s girls volleyball team has used this option to win three
straight Division I-AA section championships.
The CdM boys tennis team moved up to Division I and won a section crown
last spring, when the CdM boys volleyball team also chose to move up,
leading to an all-Back Bay Division I section final won by Newport
Harbor.
Los Alamitos Assistant Principal Jerry Halpin spoke on behalf of the
proposal Thursday. He said schools which move up often deny those in
upper divisions playoff spots, even seeds.
“If playoffs are enrollment-based, nothing else should matter,” Halpin
said.
A similar proposal was defeated, 33-31, by the council’s majority vote,
Oct. 22, 1998.
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A proposal to create an additional 12-minute quarter to break ties in CIF
football championship games was introduced as a non-action item by the
Serra League.
Mater Dei Principal Patrick Murphy spoke on behalf of the plan, which
would end the current practice of recognizing co-champions if a CIF title
game is tied at the end of regulation. The extra quarter (not sudden
death) differs from the current tiebreaker (modeled after the NCAA
version with both teams taking turns trying to score from the 25-yard
line) used in playoff games leading to the finals.
This will be voted upon April 13.
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The council voted to allow boys and girls water polo teams to increase
their regular season from 18 games to 20.
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Other proposals, to be voted upon April 13, include a plan to increase
boys and girls swimming and diving from three divisions to four and to
allow track and field athletes to qualify for CIF preliminaries based on
their individual school’s enrollment, rather than division placement by
league.
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