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[CQ-Contest] NP4Z's SS comments etc.

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Subject: [CQ-Contest] NP4Z's SS comments etc.
From: "RICHARD BOYD" <ke3q@msn.com>
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 2003 13:02:27 -0500
List-post: <mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
Felipe, thanks for listening and thinking I was working for it in SS.  I would 
like to think that anybody who listens and/or is paying attention, not just 
this year but over many years, can make some good judgments on "what's what."

I agree it's good to see KV4FZ back, especially with a classic callsign like 
that.  I think Herb hasn't been paying very close attention to SS for some 
years since he thought the two-mode win in what was it, 1970? by K7JA was the 
only time that's happened.  And, as you note, but to say it more clearly, KP4 
is almost always rarer in SS than is KP2.  I have been told that even Puerto 
Ricans go to the Virgin Islands if they want a beach vacation.  The beaches 
over there are nice and it's a real vacation spot.  And, English is the 
language there, so maybe that's the preferred place for Anglos to go, either to 
retire and live or for contest vacations.  Puerto Rico is much, much larger, 
but for the non-Spanish speaker the language "barrier," so-called, may be 
intimidating.  There are many, many, many licensed Puerto Rican hams but very, 
very few make contest QSOs.  It's been hard getting Puerto Rico in the log for 
a sweep every time I'm there.  Everybody can work me for the sweep but I can't 
work myself.

Tying back in to my first paragraph above, there are several factors I see 
playing a part.  First, there is a bit of a "generation gap" within contesting, 
that some "naysayers" are more recently on the scene.  I don't hear much 
criticism coming from the guys my own age, who probably have a better 
appreciation of the fact that I've been around a long, long time.  I guess my 
first SS was in about '66 and I've been in it every year since then that it was 
humanly possible.  I think some critics have a tendency to view the world as if 
it started when they arrived on the scene, and they don't have much 
appreciation of or interest in anything that happened before then.  I was a 
history major, which does accurately reflect that I am kind of at the opposite 
end of that spectrum of world view.

Along with the supportive comments, you allude to something else that one 
could, I could, view as an "illness" within our ranks, though we might agree 
that it's a typical one amongst any group of people, in any group involved in 
any competitive pasttime, etc.  This is the factor of a relatively small group 
of self-appointed "Sweepstakes elite," who issue pronouncements on these 
things, mostly in private, as I suspect comments to you about me not being a 
real SS op, were, quiet, behind the scenes, politicking for their point of view 
that is designed to elevate their own accomplishments and belittle others' 
accomplishments.  You can also hear some of their attitude come out in public, 
on the air and elsewhere, though generally not in direct, on-the-record, 
statements.   We all have an interest in cleaning up our act and refusing to 
support these sorts of attitudes.

These guys tend to be in geographically favored areas, and though they clearly 
are excellent operators, much of their success also directly relates to their 
geographical advantage.  Then add serious station hardware, including domestic 
stacks or multiple domestic stacks.  Most of the "also rans" elsewhere in the 
country would love to have that kind of station to work with, just like many 
would love to operate from KP4 or KP2.  There's a "chicken and egg" factor, 
that a good, and driven, operator will tend to arm himself with as many 
advantages as he can, geographical, 
enough-real-estate-to-build-a-serious-antenna-farm, the big antenna farm 
itself, SO2R accessoried to a fare-thee-well, etc.  These will produce big 
scores, resulting in a reputation as a top operator.  So, you can debate 
whether a top operator gets all the tools he needs to succeed, or whether a guy 
who gets the best tools to succeed ends up developing operator skills and 
chalking up successes to match the station.

It's interesting to consider what these folks think a "real SS operator" is.  
One might come to the conclusion that they define it as themselves and their 
closest buddies.  I'm not too bothered that that doesn't include me.  Maybe I 
should stir this kettle again, let's say, late October next year, because I'm 
glad to represent "all the little guys," who are 99% of the SS operators 
against the 1% elite who look down their noses at the rest of us.  I'm Hickory 
High School ("Hoosiers") representing the little guys -- so all you little guys 
need to work me next November cuz I'm one of you!  And I appreciate that most 
of you already ARE working me.  But if a hundred or two of you haven't been 
getting on, maybe you'll remember this discussion 11 months from now and get 
on.  hihi.

Anyway, I have a check of 65 and that means I've been around a while.  And I've 
been doing SS most of that time, and have had pretty good success, even before 
going to Puerto Rico.  At least to some extent it's my previous success that 
got me the invitation to operate at WP3R.  Even early in my contesting career, 
the local contest gurus heard me on the air and I guess liked what they heard 
because I started getting invitations to operate at all the big multi-multis in 
my region since 1965 when I started.  Unfortunately for me, I didn't go, 
because I wanted to put my own callsign on the air, pick up new countries in DX 
contests, and I was more of a contest loner I guess.  Also, I was in high 
school and college football and basketball which were a big conflict with 
contests in the fall and winter, so it was hard to get on a contest fulltime.  
I was in a lot of football and basketball games, though, not at my best, 
because I was up most of the night operating in a contest.  But, I spent years 
operating low power with limited antennas (made my own monobanders when I was 
about 14 but envied my buddy whose dad was a ham so he had a Collins S-Line and 
commercial TH-3 tribander).

Making top 10 from the east coast is tough and whoever does it certainly is an 
SS operator with SS skills.  I did it once and was 11th once, by a QSO or two 
as I recall.  And, let's face it, cutting off the "who's who" at 10 is 
arbitrary.  Is K3LR a real SS op?  Beat him once, though I think it might have 
been K3UA operating.  But, everyone in this area who knows K3UA knows he's one 
of the very best ops in this region -- which make him one of the very best ops 
in any region.  Likewise K3MM, K3ZO, N2NC, N2NT.   (My list is skewed towards 
the Atlantic Division because these are the guys you have to get by, if they're 
on, to get the Atlantic Division plaque, a tough one to get).  These guys all 
know me.  They're all excellent ops.  Put them at one of the big SS stations in 
Texas, certainly toss in W5WMU, another serious SS station, and they will 
probably all be in the top 10.  Every year.  Not to overlook folks, there are 
more on the list of east coast serious guys -- certainly K5ZD/1 who made top 10 
in SS CW this year, again.  W4MYA, K2PLF, KD4D, N4AF lots of east coast guys 
are A-1-100% "real Sweepstakes ops."

It's time we stood up to the sort of Sweepstakes snobbery that we hear year in 
and year out, and those of us (myself included) who have been at it longer need 
to instruct our younger SS hotshots, and others, in proper behavior.  If you're 
sick and tired of people cutting you off in traffic then giving YOU the finger, 
stand up to the SS snobs!  hihi.

Let me toss in another related topic.  I have repeatedly heard contest 
"authorities" (I want to leave it at that, but I mean it literally this time, 
not sarcastically) comment or intimate that coming in second in a contest to 
(fill in the blank) who often wins is like winning because (fill in the blank) 
cheats and doesn't feel it's worth winning if you can't do it by cheating.  I 
know that top contest organization guys know the callsigns I'm referring to.  
If this is the case, why these guys haven't been able to be "disciplined" for 
their misdeeds, I don't know.  Maybe it's that packet spots just happening to 
coincide throughout a weekend with the callsign going into the op's log is 
"circumstantial" and can't be proven beyond some threshold the contest guys 
see.  I don't know.

I raise this just to note, to those who aren't in either of these "loops," the 
99% of you out there who aren't in the "elite," that there are various 
undercurrents and back room hushed voice conversations that go on about the 
"meaning" of someone winning from somewhere versus someone else winning, or 
coming in second, etc. from somewhere else, like comments NP4Z has heard.  I'm 
not at the center of them all.  This kind of back channel gripping and grousing 
goes on and at some point I think we have to just kind of shrug our shoulders 
and say, "yeah, okay" and move on from it.  We have to each one look at what 
our motivations are and our "return" is for our investment of time, effort, and 
funds, and do our own thing.

Summarizing the "real SS operators" point, my own view is that anyone who 
thinks I'm not a real SS op, that I haven't paid my dues, worked my way up, 
developed my skills, etc., just hasn't been paying attention.  It may say 
something about their own experience, level, though, that they would be that 
out of touch with reality as to think that.

A final point, advice for young or younger contesters on the politics of 
contesting.  1, join a contest club and go, meet everybody, make friends.  2, 
if invited to a big multiop operation, go, and start building relationships 
with all the other ops.  3, start going to Dayton when you're young and go, if 
not every year, often, to build relationships.  One disadvantage I have is 
that, partly because of my "loner" side, I didn't go to Dayton for the first 
time until 1991 or '92, after I had been contesting for 25-27 years.  Seeing 
and being seen by the "rising elite" is part of what helps you be defined as 
one of the "rising elite" yourself.  Don't do it and you tend to be an unknown, 
except to the guys in your own state or section or region who you either beat 
or who hear your footsteps.  On the other hand, like on going to Dayton, do I 
really care enough what this or that other self-defined "hotshot" thinks of me 
to bother?  Maybe not.  Still, this is my comment on what it takes to play the 
contest politics of it so, after you've been contesting in SS for 38 years and 
been competitive in your own region some young upstart won't lower his voice 
and say "He's not a real SS operator, you know."  hihi.

My apologies to WA3FET; I'm human.  I succumed to getting down and dirty in 
this discussion.  Still, I think I avoided any four-letter words, name-calling, 
at least "naming names," etc.  I guess "snob" was the worst word I used.  hihi.

73 - Rich, KE3Q 
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