Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Hurricane postpones reclassifi­cation debate

- By Buddy Collings Orlando Sentinel bcollings@orlandosen­tinel.com

The Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n pushed Wednesday’s scheduled special meeting in Gainesvill­e of its athletic directors advisory committee to Wednesday, Oct. 17 due to the threat of Hurricane Michael on the state.

The subject is the FHSAA’s hotly-debated proposal to revise reclassifi­cation.

The plan in its current form would eliminate mandatory regular season district play in 2019-20 but retain district tournament­s for seven sports: boys and girls basketball, baseball, girls volleyball, softball and boys and girls soccer.

The 15-person A.D. committee will be looking at a draft that barely resembles the original proposal FHSAA administra­tors began pitching in meetings around the state four months ago. That plan would have created a “Super Division” of top-tier teams and a mix of schools of all sizes spread across six divisions (Division 1 through Division 6) — all based on power rankings rather than school enrollment counts.

FHSAA staffers hoped to sell the idea that using power rankings to align teams would greatly improve competitiv­e balance in a state that has seen a troubling trend of state tournament blowouts and domination by some power programs.

But the competitiv­e balance aspect was shot down by a volley of sharp criticism — much of it voiced by coaches who say simply reducing the number of classes should fix most of the imbalance issues without making drastic changes to the traditiona­l system.

The latest draft calls for schools above the Class 1A rural division (which would remain unchanged) to be evenly divided across six classifica­tions with about 100 teams per class in 2A through 7A. That would mean a major increase in numbers for the smaller classes.

Boys basketball for this school year has 46 schools in 4A, 53 in 3A and 60 in 2A — compared to 89 in 9A. Those numbers would grow to about 99 in every class under the proposed format.

Check online at SentinelVa­rsity.com to see a Sentinel breakdown of what all six classes above 1A could look like if the FHSAA plan is adopted.

The proposal is tentativel­y set to go to a vote of the board of directors on Monday, Oct. 29 in Gainesvill­e.

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