As you have noticed, we don't agree on many things, but there's at least one thing we do agree on: the first point on your list, about Scatt-type equipment, is
essential, much more essential than any of the changes that are now proposed, whether you like them or not.
I have said it before and I say it again: people will need to see what we actually do. That's why systems attempting to hide the position of the hit are the worst. I'm not saying hit-or-miss scoring is necessarily a bad idea, but if it leads to not showing the hits or misses, that's absurd. In London, both the RFP final and the pentathlon combined event were televised in such a way. Why do the producers think that in other sports with binary scoring (such as high jumping or biathlon), people will want to know
how it happened (slow-motion close-up replays of the jumper pulling the bar down with his ankles, or slow-motion close-up replays of the bullet hitting the edge of the falling plate), but in shooting and pentathlon, they don't care...?
My list of essential changes would be:
* Show the audience as much information as possible (where the hits land but also Scatt-like information, heart rates, time remaining etc).
* Have at most two shooters shooting at a time. (I know I have said one in the past, but I think the Olympics showed that you can cover two quite well except in RFP.)
* Create rules that avoid anticlimactic situations. (If you're going to do hit-or-miss, this takes a little creativity. Certainly the current RFP system is problematic: when Kumar went up to shoot his eighth series after Pupo had already won the gold medal, that's nothing but a flaw in the rules. It's like if a football team that's down 4-2 with one penalty kick remaining of a shootout would actually go up and take that kick.)
* In the Olympics at least, have such stages for way more than eight shooters per event.
There's the time aspect of course, but competitions taking longer times is something we're just going to have to deal with. And by the way, sports are certainly not required to be over in a couple of minutes to be worth TV spots. People watch marathons, golf, Formula 1, etc. Personally I enjoy watching snooker, where in the major tournaments a single match can last for three or even four multi-hour sessions. If it's interesting, people
will watch.
Dave IRL wrote:No, the final will be a certain number of shots depending on where you place. If everyone got to shoot 20, you could argue fairness, but when people are eliminated on the basis of the results of two shot groups, which aren't at all representative of the capabilities of the shooter/gun/ammo system, being far too small to be significant, then no, it's not fair.
Nobody is eliminated on the basis of less than eight shots. You might think that's too few and I won't blame you, but it seems like there's some misconception about how the proposed system works. It's not like the stupid "Top Gun" system which had single-shot eliminations (and, I might add, where you never got to see the position of the hits).
Richard H wrote:It would have been nice if the ISSF at least allowed participants a say in rule making. When we make laws and regulations we usually have them drafted then give stakeholders a period to make comment on them. You get feedback and you can either adopt all, portions, or make changes as required. This will not make everyone happy but it at least gives them a feeling that they were involved in the process.
Well, nothing is final until November, and to be fair, when they sent this out they apparently asked the member federations to ask shooters and coaches for suggestions. So I think it's not so much their not wanting input as their not realizing how to ask for it in this day and age. Only two days ago, after a lot of pressure it seems, did they publish this on their own website.