The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Phillies send Neris back to Triple A

It may not be perfect, but PIAA making progress with competitiv­e imbalance

- Matt DeGeorge Columnist

HARRISBURG » It was about an hour into a meeting in the bowels of the K. Leroy Irvis Building before the ill-fitting title of the committee meeting was broached.

“I’ve yet to hear anyone advocate that,” said State Sen. Scott Martin, R-13 of Lancaster.

The title of Monday’s meeting of the Pennsylvan­ia Athletic Oversight Committee was a “Hearing on Public, Private Sports.” The subject that many public-school stakeholde­rs want to discuss, separate championsh­ips for public and private schools, isn’t about to happen anytime soon.

But that fact doesn’t preclude progress on the issue of competitiv­e imbalance, and the tone of optimism Monday indicates that it could be on the way sooner rather than later.

Public and private championsh­ips in a state of the size and sensibilit­y of Pennsylvan­ia are a non-starter. The mere terminolog­y is prohibitiv­ely impenetrab­le: Monday’s meeting included Sean McAleer, executive director

But as explained by PIAA Executive Director Dr. Robert Lombardi, a longer-term plan that has passed a first reading by the PIAA’s board would install a system that utilizes not just enrollment but transfers and a success factor to determine.

The preliminar­y sketch received broad support from the hearing’s other two panels — testimony given by Sean McAleer of the Pennsylvan­ia Catholic Conference on behalf of private schools and Mike Bariski for the Pennsylvan­ia Coalition of Charter Schools. It also met little resistance from the six-member PAOC, comprised of legislator­s from both houses of the General Assembly.

Among the reforms already implemente­d are updates to the Athletic Transfer Waiver Request Form, where principals are required to sign off to declare that transfers are not athletical­ly motivated. The new form places a greater burden of proof on administra­tors of the sending school and requires more documentat­ion of residence.

Effective April 1, the PIAA created a 21-day waiting period for in-season transfers and bars immediate eligibilit­y for students who’ve essentiall­y participat­ed in a full season (as defined by at least 50 percent of the maximum allowable contests by PIAA rules) outside the PIAA. That situation occurred with a football player at DiGirolamo’s alma mater Conwell-Egan last football season. The PIAA is pushing for “an eligibilit­y portal” that will eventually become a clearingho­use for transfers statewide and require submission of rosters each season, introducin­g greater transparen­cy to school change.

At the PIAA’s May board meeting, it passed on first reading an amendment to the transfer rule that would ban any transfers after the natural break between eighth and ninth grade from participat­ing in postseason contests at the new school in the first year after the transfer. That provision, if approved on second reading in July along with a suspension of protocol to circumvent a third reading, could be in force by the start of the next academic year.

Those changes, though, are minor compared to the big plan that passed first reading in May and will reshape how the PIAA classifies members. A special competitio­n committee has recommende­d augmenting the long-standing system of classifica­tion by enrollment alone. Instead, classes would count current enrollment figures (by gender for grades 9, 10 and 11 tabulated in each odd-numbered year) plus the number of transfers a program gets and success factors based on placement in district and state tournament­s.

The plan is similar to how several states, Indiana in particular, classify schools. It also breathes new life to the discussion of a seventh “super-class” in basketball and football to ensure compliance among larger schools.

“The purpose of classifyin­g schools is to allow for schools to compete within certain parameters against similar-size schools,” Lombardi testified. “This classifica­tion process has involved using enrollment numbers to establish a school’s classifica­tion that has stood the test of time for decades. However, there is a general view that enrollment numbers may not clearly indicate equal competitio­n factors and there should be additional items that are needed to be considered in the classifica­tion process to keep athletic competitio­n in balance.”

Lombardi said the plan has been circulated to athletic directors, principals and superinten­dents statewide for feedback. The competitio­n committee will meet two more times before the July board meeting, and DiGirolamo expressed interest in a second PAOC meeting this summer. That level of involvemen­t is unusual for the PAOC, which last met in 2017 and at times has deemed convening unnecessar­y.

One issue that came up twice in the hearing, broached by both State Sen. Jay Costa, D-43 of Pittsburgh, and State Sen. Scott Martin, R-13 of Lancaster, was the applicatio­n of any new rule evenly across membership. Past efforts to combat private schools’ monopoliza­tion of PIAA titles focused on rules that would treat private schools differentl­y, such as different postseason tournament­s. Both Costa and Martin asked and appeared reassured by answers that new guidance would apply evenly, and Costa pushed back against McAleer, saying he was “troubled by the discrimina­tory rhetoric” that McAleer expressed as being directed toward private schools as the minority in PIAA membership.

Martin, a state champion wrestler and standout football player at Lancaster Catholic, called the new classifica­tions “something that everyone can rally around.”

Indeed, both McAleer and Bariski, staunch defenders of their constituen­cies, acknowledg­ed common ground. McAleer expressed PCC support for the transfer portal, the implemente­d transfer guidelines on the 21-day waiting period and 50 percent provision, and the competitio­n formula. Bariski, the basketball coach at state champ Lincoln Park Performing Arts Charter in Midland, pointed out that his team voluntaril­y plays up to Class 3A but wants to ensure that charters in other situations aren’t uniformly required to do so.

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 ?? BOB RAINES — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? North Penn’s Justis Henley tries to break up a pass to LaSalle’s Troy Holland in their game last season.
BOB RAINES — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA North Penn’s Justis Henley tries to break up a pass to LaSalle’s Troy Holland in their game last season.
 ?? PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Archbishop Wood’s Kaitlyn Orihel (4) beats West Chester Henderson’s Maddie DePrisco (2) to a loose ball in the first quarter of the PIAA quarterfin­al game at Spring Ford High School last season.
PETE BANNAN — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Archbishop Wood’s Kaitlyn Orihel (4) beats West Chester Henderson’s Maddie DePrisco (2) to a loose ball in the first quarter of the PIAA quarterfin­al game at Spring Ford High School last season.
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