Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

New transfer rules tough to understand

- Mike White: mwhite@postgazett­e.com and Twitter @mwhiteburg­h — By Sarah K. Spencer

Rule.” This rule was put in to stop what happened with the Neumann-Goretti girls basketball team this year. Diamond Johnson played almost an entire season at a school in Virginia and averaged 33 points a game before transferri­ng to Neumann-Goretti. She was ruled eligible before the postseason and helped the team win a PIAA championsh­ip.

• Old rule still exists — Despite the new transfer rules, the PIAA still has the rule where a student-athlete can be ruled ineligible for a year (regular season and postseason) if it is ruled they transferre­d for athletic reasons. • Competitiv­e classifica­tion

formula — The PIAA came up with the formula name. This rule deals with only football and basketball and makes teams move up in classifica­tion if they go far in the postseason and do so with a number of transfers. The formula might be a little confusing, but here goes:

Advancing to a district championsh­ip — such as the WPIAL — would give a team one point, the PIAA quarterfin­als two points, the PIAA semifinals three and a PIAA championsh­ip four. It’s important to note that points are not cumulative in a season. If a team goes to a PIAA title game, it gets only four points.

If a football or basketball team reaches six points or more over a two-year span and also exceeds the maximum number of transfers allowed, then the school moves up one classifica­tion when the PIAA realigns every two years. The maximum number of transfer students allowed on a team over a two-year span is two in basketball and five in football.

Teams that are successful and don’t reach the maximum number of transfers are unaffected by the rule. Also, teams that might have a number of transfers, but don’t go far in the postseason will not be affected.

Transfers will be followed for the next two years and teams can start getting bumped up in classifica­tion starting in the 2020-21 school year.

• Ninth-graders count — Under the competitiv­e classifica­tion formula rules, students who transfer after the natural break of eighth grade to ninth grade do not count. But if a student transfers after the start of ninth grade and plays basketball or football, that student counts toward a school’s number of transfers, even if that student plays only on the ninth-grade or JV team.

Opinions

• The competitiv­e classifica­tion formula has a hole. It is veritable open season for Class 6A teams (like St. Joseph’s Prep of Philadelph­ia) to welcome transfers because they can’t be bumped up in classifica­tion. PIAA executive director Bob Lombardi said the PIAA couldn’t figure out a solution to the 6A problem at this time, but still decided to pass the rule.

Although Class 6A basketball and football teams can’t be bumped up in class, transfer students still face postseason ineligibil­ity if they transfer any time after playing in 10th grade.

• The competitiv­e classifica­tion formula is going to affect so few schools because a team has to go to the PIAA semifinals at least once and then go far again the next season to reach six points.

• If the “10th-grade transfer” rule was around the past two years, it’s interestin­g to think what would’ve happened to some transfers in the WPIAL. Kenny White would not have been eligible for Pine-Richland’s football or basketball postseason­s last year after transferri­ng from West Allegheny. Would Thomas Burns have been eligible for Pine-Richland’s football postseason after leaving Florida and moving in with his older brother, Steeler defensive back Artie Burns?

Joey Porter Jr. wouldn’t have been eligible for North Allegheny’s football postseason last year after transferri­ng from Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic. Michael “Dino” Tomlin wouldn’t have been eligible for Shady Side Academy’s postseason in 2017 after transferri­ng from Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic, but Shady Side didn’t make the WPIAL playoffs.

• The new rules could put coaches in some tough situations. Think of this: If one of your football players transferre­d after 10th grade and is ineligible for the postseason, how much do you play him in the regular season, even if he is a starter? Do you sit him a little more in order to get another player ready for the postseason?

As for the competitio­n classifica­tion formula, imagine this situation: Say you’re the coach of the Neumann-Goretti boys basketball team, a powerhouse in Philadelph­ia that has won eight PIAA titles in nine years. Your team has one transfer student this season and makes it to the PIAA semifinals. Then next summer, a sophomore transfers to your school and is good enough to make a contributi­on to the team, but not be a star. Do you cut him, because putting him on the team would mean you have to bump up in classifica­tion the next year?

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