So your argument is that expanding the number of teams gives more teams the opportunity to win the title. Have you looked at the numbers over the past two years?enigmaax wrote: ↑Mon Mar 04, 2024 6:53 amI’m not saying there should be more divisions, I’m pointing out that it is more difficult to win a state championship in Ohio than it is virtually any other state. On top of that, football is the only sport in the state that doesn’t include all its athletes in the postseason. The line about “participation trophies” is stupid. The only thing a postseason tournament does is give everyone a chance to win the most difficult trophy to win in the entire country.RBH23 wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 5:29 pmBecause of the physical toll football takes! That’s why the tournament has been limited. Have any of you played the game?enigmaax wrote: ↑Sun Mar 03, 2024 4:54 pm
Literally every other sport in the state gives these “participation trophies” since football is the only sport in which any teams are left out of the postseason tournament.
Ohio is right at the top of the list of fewest state champions (around 1% of schools win a state title, similar to TX, NY, & PA) and you are crybabying about letting too many kids play in a tournament. Dumb.
As for your stats, are you saying all teams should make the playoffs, and Ohio should have many more divisions? We could have hundreds of divisions to guarantee more state winners. Would that make you happy?
I don’t buy your injury risk argument as genuine concern; I believe your opinion comes from this need to apply your idea of competitiveness, which largely comes from professional sports, to high school athletes. Even if it were exclusively about “participation trophies,” it’s high school; yes, there’s value merely in participation at that level.
Each region now has 7 double digit seeded teams (10-16). That’s 28 per division, or 196 for the entire state. Last year, only 5 of those teams made it to the regional semis with 1 advancing further. In 2022, only 7 made it to the semis.
There are 56 regional final teams each year, or 112 in the past two years. Only 3 double digit teams (two 10’s and one 12) have played in the regional finals with only the Springfield team advancing.
So of the 392 10-16 seeds in the past two years, only 3 advanced to the regional finals with the vast majority losing in the first or second round. This is why I claim it to be a “participation trophy.” I remember when Burg making the playoffs meant something. Now, Burg will never miss the playoffs ever again. Participation trophy!!
The teams that won state in Ohio over the past two years are the same teams that have won the titles before the expansion. The argument that Springfield proves otherwise is somewhat a joke since they have been a top public school of recent years; will be rare to see another team do what they just did.
In other words, expanding the number of teams did not change anything in Ohio. The difficulty of winning a title and the teams doing so is still the same.
With regards to injury risk, obviously the more games/practices that occur, the higher risk of injury. That’s not opinion, it’s simple math. Hence why so many college players now opt out of meaningless bowl games. Their advisors can do math.
So the real question: is the risk of injury from increasing the season by one week worth the additional participation? You say “yes”, and I say “no.” OHSAA of course says yes because it means more money. Injury and player well-being truly does not matter when it comes to their bottom line.