uconnphil2016
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Windsor survives scare from E.O. Smith
Is Windsor having a down year, or is EO decent at football these days?
Windsor survives scare from E.O. Smith
Windsor must have lost some hartford kids to Cap Prep.Is Windsor having a down year, or is EO decent at football these days?
Is Windsor having a down year, or is EO decent at football these days?
Anybody see Will Levis in person? If so how has he looked?
Anybody see Will Levis in person? If so how has he looked?
He is a good player with a very good arm and can move well in the pocket. The team is not as good as they have been in the past. He needs work as he sometimes locks onto a player instead of looking off and gets into trouble when he does that.
I would agree - strong potential is there. I've seen him twice, first time he was meh against a strong Wilbur Cross D and lost. Big game tonight but EHHS is not very good. Football: Levis torches East Haven as Xavier evens season record
Before next round of games / interesting article from Mike DiMauro on CIAC Division disparity:
State's small public schools are victims of CIAC's old tricks again
@JMick is correct on the playoff point system. The reason Naugatuck at 9-1 wouldn’t make the playoffs in those years was because they didn’t pick up enough bonus points from the teams they beat and losing to a 9-0 Ansonia on Thanksgiving is usually what killed them. Instead of getting 190 points [100 (win) + 90 (bonus for each Ansonia win)], they get zero.
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Anybody see Will Levis in person? If so how has he looked?
Smaller leagues would be a nice start, which is why I like the district model. You'd have leagues of 9ish teams, round robin scheduling, and you'd get a district championship banner to hang now that conference championship games are gone. It would give teams a chance to schedule OOC games and you could keep your rivalries.I still maintain that if the CIAC limited league play to say 50-70% of the overall schedule then the point system currently in place would be more effective. Teams would have to freedom to schedule non league games and would be encouraged via the point system to find schools of the same size or larger to play (or teams expected to be successful) for the potential points. The current system of everyone playing mostly league games renders the current point system (for school size) ineffective. The playoff system was developed in the days when there were more leagues with fewer teams and non-league games happened with greater frequency.
The district model would probably not give you the correct best team in the state. A class S or M school would never win the state poll again under the district model. It just wouldn't be fair be it if the school was Bloomfield, Ansonia, Derby or St Joe's. The present model does get it right for the most part, be it a small class S or M school or a large LL school.Smaller leagues would be a nice start, which is why I like the district model. You'd have leagues of 9ish teams, round robin scheduling, and you'd get a district championship banner to hang now that conference championship games are gone. It would give teams a chance to schedule OOC games and you could keep your rivalries.
You keep saying this and it doesn't make any more sense than the first time you said it. Let's use Ansonia for example. A potential schedule for them could be:The district model would probably not give you the correct best team in the state. A class S or M school would never win the state poll again under the district model. It just wouldn't be fair be it if the school was Bloomfield, Ansonia, Derby or St Joe's. The present model does get it right for the most part, be it a small class S or M school or a large LL school.
Xavier, Notre Dame West Haven, etc.Trinity and Joe's recruit kids. They would/should play LL anyway. If your roster has X% of kids from a town other than where the school is located they should be considered LL
Smaller leagues would be a nice start, which is why I like the district model. You'd have leagues of 9ish teams, round robin scheduling, and you'd get a district championship banner to hang now that conference championship games are gone. It would give teams a chance to schedule OOC games and you could keep your rivalries.
I don't think the demographics of a small state like Connecticut that has industrial areas as well as rural areas would support a district model. In your small school district league, what happens to small schools like Weston, St Joe's, Barlow, and Bethel that are surrounded by a plethora of LL and L schools? Also Shelton never plays Ansonia on Thanksgiving, they've been playing Derby for years. In a district model if you think Shelton, West Haven, Wilbur Cross, Trumbull and Newtown will be chomping at the bit to schedule OOC games with Oxford, Woodland, Abbot Tech, and Trinity, then I've got land in Florida you might be interested in? I say if it ain't broke don't fix it, your district model might improve a couple aspects of HS football in CT but it also opens up a whole new can of worms and causes a whole new set of problems, and is grossly unfair to many many schools on many levels. Not to mention fans up around Southington would go apesh-it if all of a sudden they had to play Cheshire, Xavier, Amity and Prep every year. They won't let it happen and neither would the FCIAC, SCC, and SWC. The district model would work well in larger States like Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, and I'll bet gas stations in those States would love the district model. Lol.You keep saying this and it doesn't make any more sense than the first time you said it. Let's use Ansonia for example. A potential schedule for them could be:
Conference:
Seymour
Trinity
Notre-Dame Fairfield
Woodland
Abbot Tech/Immaculate
Oxford
Holy Cross
Sacred-Heart
OOC:
Shelton (Thanksgiving - Annual)
Wilbur Cross/West Haven/Trumbull/Newtown
That schedule would be so much better than what they play now and they would get more first place votes by playing and beating Shelton or any of the surrounding towns annually.
I don't think the demographics of a small state like Connecticut that has industrial areas as well as rural areas would support a district model. In your small school district league, what happens to small schools like Weston, St Joe's, Barlow, and Bethel that are surrounded by a plethora of LL and L schools? Also Shelton never plays Ansonia on Thanksgiving, they've been playing Derby for years. In a district model if you think Shelton, West Haven, Wilbur Cross, Trumbull and Newtown will be chomping at the bit to schedule OOC games with Oxford, Woodland, Abbot Tech, and Trinity, then I've got land in Florida you might be interested in? I say if it ain't broke don't fix it, your district model might improve a couple aspects of HS football in CT but it also opens up a whole new can of worms and causes a whole new set of problems, and is grossly unfair to many many schools on many levels. Not to mention fans up around Southington would go apesh-it if all of a sudden they had to play Cheshire, Xavier, Amity and Prep every year. They won't let it happen and neither would the FCIAC, SCC, and SWC. The district model would work well in larger States like Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts, and I'll bet gas stations in those States would love the district model. Lol.
If Ansonia really wants a kick ass league, I say resurrect the old MBIAC. Harding, Bassick, Central, Shelton, Stratford, St Joe's, Notre Dame of Fairfield, Prep, Bunnell, Law, and add Ansonia, Amity and one or two others.
I'd rather just stick them in LL. If your players come from a certain number of towns other than where the school is, then you should be in LL. St. Joes has students from over 20 towns IIRCI really starting to think they should pluck paraochials/schools of choice (maybe even the preps but PG years are problematic) and create their own Division as a start.
You're making it out to be a lot harder than it is. The district model would work better in a small state because your furthest opponent isn't even that far away. As for the schools you mentioned, they're actually the best case for the district model. The "SWC" district would look something like:
Barlow
Bassick
Bethel
Brookfield
Bunnell
New Fairfield
St. Joes (if you really want to count them as an S/M school. They should really be LL)
Stratford
Weston
No one has to drive over an hour.
There aren't enough of them, the state is too small. It works in Jersey, though travel expenses are enormous and very unfair.I really starting to think they should pluck paraochials/schools of choice (maybe even the preps but PG years are problematic) and create their own Division as a start.
I'd rather just stick them in LL. If your players come from a certain number of towns other than where the school is, then you should be in LL. St. Joes has students from over 20 towns IIRC
Where's Trinity Catholic, where's Immaculate, where's ND of Fairfield, who do they play? Pop Warner teams, Brewster NY?
As to your argument on the state poll, from week to week it is a balanced list if different sized schools. Ansonia is Class S, St Joe's is Class S, New Canaan is L, Darien is LL, Masuk is L, Fitch is M or L, Windsor is M or L, not sure about Middletown. In your district model, seeing a Class S or M school in the top ten would be extremely rare.
Masuk or Newtown wouldn't play Brookfield, they'd rather schedule OOC games with Xavier, Darien, Prep, West Haven, NDWH, or New Canaan. There would be no incentive for larger schools to play OOC games with schools like Brookfield, and every incentive to play OOC games with the state power programs.Like I said, you're worried about maybe 20 teams instead of the other hundred. And it wouldn't be that rare because in a 9 team conference you'd have room for two out of district games if you so choose. Brookfield could go to Masuk or Newtown. Bloomfield could go to Southington. Berlin could go to Cheshire. This would also keep the CCC from gaming the playoff point system. The fact that under the current system, Windsor and Southington don't play each other is absurd and it's all so they can have easy roads to the playoffs.
I doubt it. Why are you going to schedule a team you'll probably see in the playoffs? You're going to end up scheduling local short travel OOC games.Masuk or Newtown wouldn't play Brookfield, they'd rather schedule OOC games with Xavier, Darien, Prep, West Haven, NDWH, or New Canaan. There would be no incentive for larger schools to play OOC games with schools like Brookfield, and every incentive to play OOC games with the state power programs.
Those 20 teams are there because they are the best teams year in and year out. How stupid can you be?Like I said, you're worried about maybe 20 teams instead of the other hundred. And it wouldn't be that rare because in a 9 team conference you'd have room for two out of district games if you so choose. Brookfield could go to Masuk or Newtown. Bloomfield could go to Southington. Berlin could go to Cheshire. This would also keep the CCC from gaming the playoff point system. The fact that under the current system, Windsor and Southington don't play each other is absurd and it's all so they can have easy roads to the playoffs.
Those 20 teams are there because they are the best teams year in and year out. How stupid can you be?
I say that with all due respect. Lol