With all the posts about the Scorpions v. NEFC debate, I thought I'd post separately about the merits of MAPLE's anti-tampering rule.
I can think of 3 reasons to have a rule against tampering:
1. Offers to players before a season is over could affect the competitive integrity of the game. A player who knows that she will play for club B next year may give less than full effort for her present club, especially when playing against club B. For example, if a game was significant for automatic Region 1 Premier League acceptance, the temptation to help club B would simply be a matter of the player's self-interest.
2. Anti-tampering rules promote an orderly and fair system of players switching teams. Clubs all have an equal chance to pitch themselves to the most desired players. And, more importantly for youth soccer, all players have an equal chance to compete for spots without having to worry about beating other players to tryouts that aren't advertised.
3. Prohibition against tampering keeps people from interfering in the coach/player relationship during the season. A person trying to persuade a player to leave his team could easily add gratuitous derogatory remarks about the player's existing coach in order to stir discontent.
I think these are pretty good reasons to prohibit tampering. If I ran MAPLE, I'd discipline clubs that tamper pretty hard. There isn't any reason that all the recruiting, offers, etc. that influence player movement can't be accomplished after the season is over.
That having been said, I think MAPLE should pass some rules to ensure that a post-season player market has time to operate properly. Right now, there's a "land rush" mentality surrounding tryouts in June. Clubs, especially the bigger ones, rush to hold tryouts to the point that they often hold tryouts on the same day. They then make offers quickly to players they want and sometimes pressure players to commit before players have a chance to look at all their options. This kind of behavior only encourages tampering because clubs feel they need to "jump the gun" in order to communicate with potential recruits. Additionally, players thinking about changing clubs feel they need to talk to clubs before tryouts in order to find out if they will be accepted to new teams. If they don't find this information, it's simply too dangerous to skip their existing team's tryouts.
Why not have a rule that no offers to join a MAPLE team can be accepted or withdrawn (they can be declined) before 21 days from the opening of the tryout period? This would take the pressure off clubs to hold tryouts in the first few days and would give players plenty of time to go to multiple tryouts and check out their options. This would also reduce the incentive to tamper. If clubs know that players can't be signed for 3 weeks, there's plenty of time to contact the players that are of interest.
I can think of 3 reasons to have a rule against tampering:
1. Offers to players before a season is over could affect the competitive integrity of the game. A player who knows that she will play for club B next year may give less than full effort for her present club, especially when playing against club B. For example, if a game was significant for automatic Region 1 Premier League acceptance, the temptation to help club B would simply be a matter of the player's self-interest.
2. Anti-tampering rules promote an orderly and fair system of players switching teams. Clubs all have an equal chance to pitch themselves to the most desired players. And, more importantly for youth soccer, all players have an equal chance to compete for spots without having to worry about beating other players to tryouts that aren't advertised.
3. Prohibition against tampering keeps people from interfering in the coach/player relationship during the season. A person trying to persuade a player to leave his team could easily add gratuitous derogatory remarks about the player's existing coach in order to stir discontent.
I think these are pretty good reasons to prohibit tampering. If I ran MAPLE, I'd discipline clubs that tamper pretty hard. There isn't any reason that all the recruiting, offers, etc. that influence player movement can't be accomplished after the season is over.
That having been said, I think MAPLE should pass some rules to ensure that a post-season player market has time to operate properly. Right now, there's a "land rush" mentality surrounding tryouts in June. Clubs, especially the bigger ones, rush to hold tryouts to the point that they often hold tryouts on the same day. They then make offers quickly to players they want and sometimes pressure players to commit before players have a chance to look at all their options. This kind of behavior only encourages tampering because clubs feel they need to "jump the gun" in order to communicate with potential recruits. Additionally, players thinking about changing clubs feel they need to talk to clubs before tryouts in order to find out if they will be accepted to new teams. If they don't find this information, it's simply too dangerous to skip their existing team's tryouts.
Why not have a rule that no offers to join a MAPLE team can be accepted or withdrawn (they can be declined) before 21 days from the opening of the tryout period? This would take the pressure off clubs to hold tryouts in the first few days and would give players plenty of time to go to multiple tryouts and check out their options. This would also reduce the incentive to tamper. If clubs know that players can't be signed for 3 weeks, there's plenty of time to contact the players that are of interest.
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