Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like they DQ’d.
Benefit of doubt foes to the swimmer.
Stroke and turn officials are human volunteers. They make mistakes and we are still nice to them because they’re our friends and neighbors.
At the Olympics, I think there’s a S/T official for each lane and each end of the pool to avoid this problem. Unless your child is trying to qualify for nationals, I would let it go. Seriously. My mom talks about pushy, abrasive parents twenty years later. Nobody remembers the times, but they’ll remember negative interactions for decades.
I’m actually the OP and I am a stroke and turn judge - I DQed the kid for this. The swimmer got really upset and his parents did too, and they let me know. I just wanted to confirm that I got the call right.
NP. Thank you for being a S/T judge. I cannot for the life of me figure out what is wrong with the parents who would confront an official about a DQ ever, let alone at a summer swim B meet. Jesus Christ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like they DQ’d.
Benefit of doubt foes to the swimmer.
Stroke and turn officials are human volunteers. They make mistakes and we are still nice to them because they’re our friends and neighbors.
At the Olympics, I think there’s a S/T official for each lane and each end of the pool to avoid this problem. Unless your child is trying to qualify for nationals, I would let it go. Seriously. My mom talks about pushy, abrasive parents twenty years later. Nobody remembers the times, but they’ll remember negative interactions for decades.
I’m actually the OP and I am a stroke and turn judge - I DQed the kid for this. The swimmer got really upset and his parents did too, and they let me know. I just wanted to confirm that I got the call right.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like they DQ’d.
Benefit of doubt foes to the swimmer.
Stroke and turn officials are human volunteers. They make mistakes and we are still nice to them because they’re our friends and neighbors.
At the Olympics, I think there’s a S/T official for each lane and each end of the pool to avoid this problem. Unless your child is trying to qualify for nationals, I would let it go. Seriously. My mom talks about pushy, abrasive parents twenty years later. Nobody remembers the times, but they’ll remember negative interactions for decades.
Anonymous wrote:That would be a DQ as others mentioned. I am training to be a S&T judge and I’m surprised at how much actually gets missed. Normally two people each watch 3 lanes, with one person at each end of the pool. Being in training means you watch and are basically an extra pair of eyes who can’t actually make the calls. There have been things I’ve seen that the “real” official kissed and vice versa. I know for a fact my own kid has benefited from missed calls. Human error definitely comes into play just like it does for refereeing a sport. I don’t see anything wrong with pointing out something illegal in you child’s swimming even if they didn’t DQ because chances are it will DQ them the next time. Our coaches aren’t always good at following up on DQs so if you see something might as well point it out. Just make sure you’re giving them correct info.
Anonymous wrote:Last night at my sons B meet, I was unsure about whether something counted as a DQ during a breastroke event. During the swimmer’s underwater pullout, he did two breastroke kicks underwater before breaking the surface. It’s my understanding that in MCSL swimmers can take one full breastroke kick where they pull their arms all the way down and a dolphin kick (and the dolphin kick can come at any point this year), but they can’t take multiple underwater breastroke kicks underwater before breaking the surface. Would this be a DQ?
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP. S&T judge here.
Yes that would be a DQ however if he ended up with a legal time it’s possible that the judge missed it and was looking at the other two lanes when it occurred.
Anonymous wrote:Last night at my sons B meet, I was unsure about whether something counted as a DQ during a breastroke event. During the swimmer’s underwater pullout, he did two breastroke kicks underwater before breaking the surface. It’s my understanding that in MCSL swimmers can take one full breastroke kick where they pull their arms all the way down and a dolphin kick (and the dolphin kick can come at any point this year), but they can’t take multiple underwater breastroke kicks underwater before breaking the surface. Would this be a DQ?