Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better yet how can we live stream the games? So it appears no spectators as of now. We have to accept. lets focus on plan b.
One option is to see if the team manager can do a FaceTime or zoom stream. All you need is an iPhone.
Anonymous wrote:Better yet how can we live stream the games? So it appears no spectators as of now. We have to accept. lets focus on plan b.
Anonymous wrote:Better yet how can we live stream the games? So it appears no spectators as of now. We have to accept. lets focus on plan b.
Anonymous wrote:That blows. No spectators. I know it makes sense and it’s so the kids can play but still sucks. Refs will be happy no one yelling at them. Lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know how they expect this to work, people driving 90 minutes each way to sit in their cars for 8 hours straight? Unlikely.
These performative rules are an unnecessary pain in the neck. Bars and restaurants are still open but these tournaments are going to prevent a single parent spectator outdoors which presents basically zero COVID risk.
Yeah, it really is stupid. How is it "safe" to be indoors at a bar/restaurant, but somehow less safe to be outdoors watching a sporting event? In both scenarios, one can socially distance (in fact, it's much easier to maintain social distance outside) ... some reasonable limit like 1 or 2 spectators per play would be more than enough to keep folks very spread out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know how they expect this to work, people driving 90 minutes each way to sit in their cars for 8 hours straight? Unlikely.
These performative rules are an unnecessary pain in the neck. Bars and restaurants are still open but these tournaments are going to prevent a single parent spectator outdoors which presents basically zero COVID risk.
Anonymous wrote:Better yet how can we live stream the games? So it appears no spectators as of now. We have to accept. lets focus on plan b.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know how they expect this to work, people driving 90 minutes each way to sit in their cars for 8 hours straight? Unlikely.
These performative rules are an unnecessary pain in the neck. Bars and restaurants are still open but these tournaments are going to prevent a single parent spectator outdoors which presents basically zero COVID risk.
+1. We attended the girls’ tournament last weekend. While we enjoyed ourselves and appreciated having a tournament at all, there were opportunities:
- Parents and kids warming up an hour before their game in the same small place as spectators watching the existing games.
- Zero enforcement of parents on the sidelines, at times standing inches off the field.
- Nets with holes in them leading to questions of whether a shot was a goal or came in through the side net.
- Big drop off in ref quality vs the standard NCSL refs we get for league games (who are generally good).
- Little to no tournament officials, and the ones who were there were teenagers playing on their phones the whole time.
Oddly, it was not nearly as organized as the Alexandria tournament last month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know how they expect this to work, people driving 90 minutes each way to sit in their cars for 8 hours straight? Unlikely.
These performative rules are an unnecessary pain in the neck. Bars and restaurants are still open but these tournaments are going to prevent a single parent spectator outdoors which presents basically zero COVID risk.
Anonymous wrote:Hunt Valley is also this weekend. No spectator limit.