- Jan 16, 2014
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Just leave it aloooooooone! No more doggin' threads around. HEEEEEEEEEEE HEEEE HEEE!Curse you for finding this thread before me.
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Just leave it aloooooooone! No more doggin' threads around. HEEEEEEEEEEE HEEEE HEEE!Curse you for finding this thread before me.
**please raise your hand if you're related to Jocelyn**
What is the difference between sand bagging & stacking? Is it only an issue with large gyms? What about small gyms with only two teams? I'm still learning & would love some insight.
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I disagree. To me sandbagging is making the conscientious decision to drop your team to a lower level in the name of the win. Stacking is different to me. It is putting your strongest athletes on a team. Athletes who at Gym B might get put on a higher level team ...but at Gym A they're not. Big gyms with a deep deep talent pool can definitely stack their teams with talent rich athletes at every level. However if they then take that amazing stacked team of talented athletes and compete them down a level (or two or three) at a comp so they can pretty much guarantee they get that coveted jacket...that's where stacking just became sandbagging.Sandbagging and stacking mean the same thing.
I don't think it's a large gym only issue, but they often get the most blame.
I disagree. To me sandbagging is making the conscientious decision to drop your team to a lower level in the name of the win. Stacking is different to me. It is putting your strongest athletes on a team. Athletes who at Gym B might get put on a higher level team ...but at Gym A they're not. Big gyms with a deep deep talent pool can definitely stack their teams with talent rich athletes at every level. However if they then take that amazing stacked team of talented athletes and compete them down a level (or two or three) at a comp so they can pretty much guarantee they get that coveted jacket...that's where stacking just became sandbagging.
Yep, I agree. This is how I see it
Gym A (small senior, no level 5 team, stacking)
has a level 4 team where all athletes have layouts, 1/2 have combo passes, 4 girls have fulls, 2 are working doubles
Gym B (small senior, no level 5, sandbagging)
has a level 4 team where all athletes have layouts, 14 of the athletes have fulls, 2 have standing fulls, 5 girls have doubles
At gym A, there are technically some girls who should be level 5, but as a whole, there is not enough level 5 talent to build a team. At gym B, there are majority of athletes who should be level 5 but the gym refuses to go level 5 because winning would not be guaranteed. I don't think it's uncommon to see a lower level team, especially from a small gym, that has some stellar talent. But, when you have a level 3 team and half of that team crosses to a level 5 where they are able to tumble and stunt at that level, I start shaking my head.
I disagree. To me sandbagging is making the conscientious decision to drop your team to a lower level in the name of the win. Stacking is different to me. It is putting your strongest athletes on a team. Athletes who at Gym B might get put on a higher level team ...but at Gym A they're not. Big gyms with a deep deep talent pool can definitely stack their teams with talent rich athletes at every level. However if they then take that amazing stacked team of talented athletes and compete them down a level (or two or three) at a comp so they can pretty much guarantee they get that coveted jacket...that's where stacking just became sandbagging.
I would say that the last one depends on the gym. If you have a massive gym, you can have a full team of fulls. If you have a small gym, then you can't. I wouldn't call it sandbagging as they can compete level 5, but would not max out.Yep, I agree. This is how I see it
Gym A (small senior, no level 5 team, stacking)
has a level 4 team where all athletes have layouts, 1/2 have combo passes, 4 girls have fulls, 2 are working doubles
Gym B (small senior, no level 5, sandbagging)
has a level 4 team where all athletes have layouts, 14 of the athletes have fulls, 2 have standing fulls, 5 girls have doubles
At gym A, there are technically some girls who should be level 5, but as a whole, there is not enough level 5 talent to build a team. At gym B, there are majority of athletes who should be level 5 but the gym refuses to go level 5 because winning would not be guaranteed. I don't think it's uncommon to see a lower level team, especially from a small gym, that has some stellar talent. But, when you have a level 3 team and half of that team crosses to a level 5 where they are able to tumble and stunt at that level, I start shaking my head.
It definitely is a thing! And don't forget 10x National Champions blaring on the website (conveniently not mentioning that those "Nationals" were won as the only team competing in the division)I think in a true stacking situation, gym A's team would instead be Level 3. A level 4 team in that case is actually a true level team and not really a stacked team. To me a stacked team is one where the team could actually be successful at the next higher level, not just meet minimum requirements.
There needs to be a word for when gyms compete the Gym A team as level 5 even though they won't be competitive in order to be able to boast/claim that they have a L5 team (when they really don't) - that's "a thing" too ;).
I don't think that's really what bothers people. In a small gym you might end up with a wide range of skills on a level 3 team. I know our Sr3 team has a couple girls that can do fulls, but also a few that can't do tucks. I don't consider that stacking, the majority of the athletes are level 3. The issue is more when all the atheletes could be level 4/5 and instead are competing level 3.If you have a new small gym with a level 3 that has 4-5 with running fulls two of which have standing fulls, 4 that don't have running tucks or jumps to Springs and more that fall in the level 3 maybe low 4 category do you still consider it stacking? Also most of those 4 that aren't technically level 3 athletes because they don't have the tumbling crossover to level 1 is that stacking? Do you expect these small gyms that have 4-5 athletes at each level just run small one stunt group teams? As long as a team isn't performing skills above the level they are competing at why does it have to be viewed as unethical? I agree, taking a higher level team & competing them lower for a specific comp (sandbagging) seems unethical.
Ok. Thanks. I was thinking maybe but some people seem pretty adamant (not necessarily in this thread) that a level 5 athlete shouldn't compete below a level 4. Which is not always possible. I know they looked at trying to have a R5 or 4 exhibition team but there weren't enough athletes to have two full stunt groups & the stunts they did do never hit.I don't think that's really what bothers people. In a small gym you might end up with a wide range of skills on a level 3 team. I know our Sr3 teams has a couple girls that can do fulls, but also a few that can't do tucks. I don't consider that stacking, the majority of the athletes are level 3. The issue is more when all the atheletes could be level 4/5 and instead are competing level 3.
I disagree. To me sandbagging is making the conscientious decision to drop your team to a lower level in the name of the win. Stacking is different to me. It is putting your strongest athletes on a team. Athletes who at Gym B might get put on a higher level team ...but at Gym A they're not. Big gyms with a deep deep talent pool can definitely stack their teams with talent rich athletes at every level. However if they then take that amazing stacked team of talented athletes and compete them down a level (or two or three) at a comp so they can pretty much guarantee they get that coveted jacket...that's where stacking just became sandbagging.