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Re: [CQ-Contest] How to make WRTC more like the Olympics?

To: sawyered@earthlink.net,<cq-contest@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [CQ-Contest] How to make WRTC more like the Olympics?
From: Jim George <n3bb@mindspring.com>
Date: Tue, 16 Aug 2016 17:10:47 -0500
List-post: <cq-contest@contesting.com">mailto:cq-contest@contesting.com>
As one who has competed, refereed, and written about three different WRTCs, and worked hard to qualify for Moscow in 2010 (and didn't make it), I believe that the present system is a good one. It is strenuous, but doable if one really wants to hit it hard. People qualified for WRTC in New England with their own stations and by traveling to "super stations" as guest ops, as well as joining multi-op stations with good locations and antennas. That was the case in a number of team leaders in WRTC 2014, and I tried to capture that effort with several people as examples. Yes, it's expensive and yes, it's time-consuming. There are a few that have great stations at home, and/or live in geographically advantaged locations. But many if not most of the WRTC 2014 team leaders did it the hard way, with lots of guest operating and strategic planning.

With deference to Dave, K8CC, I think this beats the old method of handing a slot to the largest clubs, although each club did have an internal qual system. In this area Texas, none of the clubs is large enough to be granted a qual slot, so we would be at the mercy of "groveling" for a seat (probably too strong a word, but I'll use it) with club to our east or west.

All in all, the current qual processes are well documented. It's a very hard process and many people are not able or willing to take it on. That is a factor indeed, and so some terrific operators must seek spots based on their reputations and friendships. But all in all, I think the current process is the best one yet.

Jim George
N3BB

 At 05:48 PM 8/16/2016 -0400, Ed Sawyer wrote:
You can't make something more like the Olympics that is fundamentally flawed
in how it works.

The Olympics tests people on EXACTLY the same event regionally with people
competing head to head.  Those people then meet in one place and re-compete
in EXACTLY the same event.

WRTC has 50% of people that compete in very different circumstances and
conditions doing mostly the same thing but not necessarily (HP, LP, Mult)
and then they meet and almost 100% do something different in the final
competition.

50% of the participants are just friends of the first 50%.

Adding video and sound and having visitors doesn't change the above.  Sorry.

Ed  N1UR

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