CIF sites left open to chance
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RICK DEVEREUX
The fact that the Newport Harbor High football team did not lose a
game all year and was never ranked lower than No. 3 in the polls this
fall does not equate to much of an advantage in the CIF Southern
Section Division VI playoffs.
The Sailors (9-0-1) won the Sea View League championship and
received the No. 2 seed in the playoffs. Newport Harbor is in elite
company. Only 11 of the 374 CIF Southern Section football teams
finished the regular season without a loss.
That’s fewer than 3%.
One might think such an honor would mean guaranteed home games in
the playoffs.
The Sailors have one game secured at Davidson Field, the
first-round contest against El Dorado Friday at 7 p.m. If Newport
wins, the quarterfinal game would be at Western High against Kennedy
if the Fighting Irish defeat Charter Oak in the opening round.
Why would an undefeated team have to travel to play a team that
has four loses?
Does Newport’s 10-10 tie with Foothill damage the Sailors’
credentials that much?
Did someone have to crunch numbers to deduce Kennedy had a better
scoring average on Saturday night games following a school holiday?
Did the BCS power rankings apply?
It was much easier than that.
The team that has played the fewest home games, plays at home in
the next round. That’s the Southern Section way.
If the two teams have a similar number of home games, a coin flip
decides the following week’s host.
The Sailors would play Charter Oak at home if the Chargers beat
Kennedy Friday.
Why?
Because Newport won a coin flip (flips for each round are
conducted in advance in football).
If two home teams advance, whichever school correctly answers the
scientific question, “Heads or tails?” will be the home team for the
next round.
“I would like to see it more like the NFL, where you get to keep
your home-field advantage throughout the playoffs,” Newport Harbor
Coach Jeff Brinkley said.
There comes a point where being fair for one team becomes unfair
for the other team.
Instead of studying a team’s tendencies on first-and-10 from the
right hash mark, maybe the Sailors will start to study an opponent’s
record of calling heads or tails.
The Corona del Mar girls tennis team is the No. 3 seed in the CIF
Southern Section Division I playoffs and had to play its second round
match at Mission Viejo, an unseeded opponent because it lost a coin
flip.
While CdM (17-3) can handle ground strokes and volleys, it
apparently can’t handle the coin flip because the team will play at
Harvard-Westlake in today’s quarterfinal match because of another
unfortuitous coin toss.
The Sage Hill girls tennis team is the No. 4 seed in division V,
and yet the Lightning had to play their second-round match at Granite
Hills, courtesy of a coin.
The CdM girls volleyball team advanced to today’s Division III-A
semifinal match against Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks by winning at
Santa Ynez Saturday.
The Sea Kings are the Pacific Coast League champions, the top seed
in the playoffs and finished the season ranked No. 1 in their
division.
Santa Ynez finished third in the Los Padres League.
And yet the Pirates were the host team in the quarterfinal match.
Kids, coaches and parents have worked too hard and sacrificed too
much to let the decision be made by a 50-50 chance.
It should be pretty easy to decide which team should have
home-field advantage. Just look at the records.
The team with more wins plays at home.
Otherwise the regular season does not mean much.
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