ok...so it's been a few days, and I'm still comprehending all that has happened, my feelings on it all and where we go from here.
In regards to the tumbling, I think we all agree that it's not so much the actual skills as it is the technique and the throwing of said skills before they are ready. I have seen some very scary tumbling (at all levels) that I would not for a second consider allowing an athlete to throw. I always wonder if their coaches are seeing the same thing I am. If not, what the heck are they looking at? If they are, is the push for skills and higher levels outweighing the safety and proper progression of the sport? I think I know the answer to that.
In regards to the uniform, this has been hanging over our heads for years. It really doesn't shock me that they slipped it in. My question is, why does it need to be regulated by the USASF? If, as a parent, you don't want your kids wearing a crop top, there are plenty of gyms that wear full. The uniform is a personal choice, and why shouldn't we be given the right to make that? Forget the fact that the 10 year old on seniors can wear it, but the 14 year old junior can't. That's just going to cause internal issues...or the complete destruction of all junior level teams. I can think of several gyms within drivable distance to mine that wear full tops. If any of our athletes or their parents refused to allow them to wear a crop, they could certainly go there without a severe inconvenience.
The age-grid...well, I'm not upset about the minimum age on seniors being 10, or the youth age bumping up to 12. My youthies aren't necessarily thrilled (particularly the ones that would've aged out), but whatever. Again, I think bumping the age up to 12 will effectively kill the junior divisions. I would've like to have seen the tiny age bumped up. The international age I'm not crazy about (and not just because it just killed our IAG). Why are we creating separate ages for US vs International countries? We've already made tumbling less important to help protect those teams. I understand that they are trying to build up the International teams, but separate rules for separate countries? Not something I'll agree with. This has to be all or none. Either you don't allow the US to compete, or everyone competes by the same rules (the Bangkok situation should serve as an example here).
The image etiquette is the one that really got my blood boiling. The vast majority of the things listed are what should be happening, but the need to regulate it from the governing body? Yes, everyone should display good sportsmanship. Yes, cheerleaders should look presentable. I agree that every team should have its moment, and yes we instill these into our cheerleaders. Who exactly is going to be in charge of enforcing these? Currently, that's my job...but are the EP's taking over that job? The kids who volunteer at the comps going to be in charge? The same people whose job it is to make sure no one is saving seats, staying in VIP seating all day, or making sure people don't use more time than allotted in warmup? What about the judges? Are they going to enforce it? The same ones who tell me to add variety to my level 2 tosses, add more tumbling, or tell me to dance to counts not words? What about the actual EP's? The ones that allow teams to drop levels to win a jacket, allow overage athletes to compete and charge money for you to contest it. What about the ones that have unsafe warmup, with minimum amounts of time to actually warmup, or make you stand on line after warming up for 40 minutes? The same event producers who won't allow a universal scoresheet...those EP's?
The thing that bothered me most was the back-door wheeling and dealing. This should be an open process. If there are numbers, let's see them. If the only way this all could be done was in private, than there's something wrong with that. We are, for the most part, and educated group. We want the sport and the industry to succeed. Gives us valid reasons, and we can probably get on board.