skank;777034 wrote:What don't you get? I mean, please explain it to me and I'll try and do a better job of explaining it to you. My goodness, I have no problem with the best teams playing each other....It's how they get to be the best teams is where the problem is.
If you truly believe that the OHSAA actually went to all the trouble of coming up with a CBR, due to "25 years of crying", I guess I just don't know what to tell you.
It's impossible to change a closed mind, but I'll try one more time.
Let's limit our discussion to football. Of all sports, football's the one that least depends on having a stable of studs enter your school as freshmen. Especially at the lower levels. A couple of stars can make a difference, but most private schools don't have just a couple of stars. What they have is 11 guys who have prepared themselves, mentally, physically, spiritually and emotionally to compete, doing what they're supposed to do every play, as a team, with attitude. Honestly, how many teams lose because the coaches have chosen their "stars" before the season even starts, play favorites, discourage a lot of potential players, give indicators to the team that certain players are better than others, belittle those who they don't like, allow politics (parents) to interfere, rely on pure physical ability rather than teamwork, etc., etc.
Coldwater, Steubenville and Kenton all beat my Alter Knights in the last several years, because they all had a few offensive stars who were taller and/or better than the Alter guys who were playing against them, but also because they had confidence, poise, teamwork, discipline and preparation. But Alter also beat those teams, not because of Alter's stars, but because of Alter's confidence, poise, teamwork,
etc. These teams all were from similar sized schools, and all have won state championships recently. Why would you choose Alter to boost to a higher level? For that matter, why would you boost the others to a higher level?
Your reasons are all specious. Basically, you don't like private schools. It's really that simple. You like that the publics divide the state up and give everyone a full scholarship. Then you argue until you're blue that somehow anybody who doesn't play by those rules is getting an advantage, despite charging families $8,000 a year per kid or more, despite inferior facilities, despite compensation packages for teachers, administrators and coaches that are often 40 to 50 percent below what the public schools pay. In addition, public high schools take way more kids from private grade schools than private high schools take from public grade schools every year, and that's just fine with you. But have one or two or even ten kids go from public grade schools to private high schools and play sports, and you scream bloody murder. And if they get any financial aid - even if they still pay thousands and even though at the public school they get a free ride - and you cry foul. When we say we've had enough of your crap, you start yelling about all the "cheating".
There now, are you starting to see another side to the story? I didn't think so.