It isn't an asinine rule. Basketball in North Korea has asinine rules. You just disagree with it. I understand the benefit of status quo and I also see the benefits of the proposed changes.Deep Breath wrote:Like a wrote before, if this asenine rule passes, the peewee choice league at MM is going to triple in size. Parents will be lined up around the corner to get their sons 2 full years of checking before they go to bantams.
Also, in reference to the refs not wanting to deal with the new rule, I agree completely. It's awful now, the abuse these people take from parents, coaches, players. Now they will be asked to put even more discretion into their calls "was that a check?", "was that just a rub out?", "was he swinging his arms?". What a joke. Make these kids play 'ponytail' hockey for the first 8+ years of organized hockey is ridiculous. Hope the powers that be that run youth football don't get any crazy ideas like "you know, some of these kids are bigger than others. We shouldn't allow tackling until they are all 13 or 14 years old, because that will really allow the game to grow."
If there were no rules today and you were starting from scratch, I think there is a lot of merit to the gradual introduction they describe. "What a joke." Maybe the joke is having a 'flip the switch approach' like we have.
The Mike Milbury story is priceless. Especially when you consider the heavily-penalized source. These videos are excellent, but I'm afraid not enough people are seeing them. I was viewer 200-something and they've been up on uStream for six weeks...that's like just 5 people per day. And we don't know that they are watching much of the hour. They really do an excellent job of making the case.
Part of me thinks that they are just moving a 'day of reckoning' back two years. But then I think of their desire to overlay the observational evidence (the two practices in Colorado) with what LTAD says is the trainability window for skill development and it does make sense.
It's funny, many people argue that the ADM and its application of LTAD principles is off-base, but nobody ever cites their own studies that refute the LTAD concepts. To me that shows a lack of understanding, which is understandable because it is dealing with the science of childhood development and the science of sport.
Soccer's studies have reached the same conclusion about rethinking how we approach teaching the game. If this really were a cockamamie idea there wouldn't be so much support from knowledgable people. (Cynics now say they only get buy-in because they exclude dissenters.)
As for the Choice league, perhaps that's what we need. A "control group" in Minnesota that doesn't follow suit when USA Hockey makes the rule. Otherwise how can you prove you are right?
Finally, for those that think this is the brainchild of a roomful of idiots, we now know who they guys are that came up with this. Among others, Kevin McLaughlin, the ADM guys, Mike Milbury, Brian Burke, Al MacInnis, and a Mayo Clinic doctor whose kids play in the NHL. Whether or not we agree, these guys are all informed enough to be entitled to their own opinion.