NCS football seeding meeting: How does it work?
By Michael Bower
Wednesday, November 7th, 2007 at 12:01 pm in East Bay Football, General, Live NCS football seeding updates.
From reading posts around the Internet and some comments, I am getting the idea that some people out there don’t really know how an NCS seeding meeting works. Let me tell you the exact procedure that goes on at the meeting.
First: This one is most important. The coach has to show up. No coach, then no spot in the playoffs. Don’t laugh. It has happend. A no show would even keep De La Salle out of the playoffs!
Second: The coaches begin to fill in the blanks on a chalk board full of questions for each team that is applying for a spot. The coach needs to fill in categories such as: Overall record, record in league, record against same-class competition (ie 3-A, 4-A), record against teams applying for a playoff spot, coaches rankings (coaches rank all the teams in the order they believe from best to worst). After the coaches fill in these blanks, they sit down in seats like students would before class.
Third: The coaches usually introduce themselves and the members on the seeding committee do the same. Then the coaches draw a stick that has a number on it. This is the speaking order. Each coach or representative of the team gets no more than two minutes to pitch their team and give reasons why they should be seeded over another team or why they should get in the playoffs. The best is when De La Salle’s Bob Ladouceur gets up to talk. I don’t think he needs to do much pitching for that No. 1 seed!!
Fourth: The NCS seeding committee takes in all the information and begins to elect teams into the playoffs. Now, they don’t seed the teams here. They just decide which teams get into the playoffs. One person on the seeding committee must nominate a team and the two other people on the committee need to agree. This usually goes quick until around the fifth team or so, because then they start to debate. The coaches must remain quiet and cannot talk during this process unless the committee asks them a question. When the coaches finish their two-minute speeches that is it. There is no more pitching (Although, coaches always seem to blurt something out to try to get the committee’s attention).
Fifth: The unhappy teams that didn’t get in usually leave at this point. That’s when the reporters go get the interviews and reactions. Usually from some unhappy coaches. But this is also when the committee seeds the eight teams selected. Again, there is no talking from the coaches unless they are asked a question or asked to speak.
Sixth: The seeds are done and now sites of games and game times are determined. The host school gets a nice bag, which has instructions from NCS and some tickets for the fans to purchase to get into the game. And that is it. Then it is game time!
Any questions on the process? Let me know and I will be glad to answer them.
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