Sorry if I might appear biased as I am a mate of Stodge's but I'm sure he's not out to attack Mike Napier's skill/professionalism etc. I think it's basically two things:
1) The amount of money involved is quite alot and there's fear that this sort of professionalism within the sport will kill it
2) The fact that the WCH SI team who also do a fantastic job every race for FREE weren't even considered
With regard to the BOF site I think the main problem isn't the fact that it's not flashy but more that the logos etc on it are very poor and n months on it still isn't finished. If I did that sort of job for my customers I'd never get paid.
paid 'jobs for the boys' in Orienteering
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About the BOF site - i find it very hard to find things on it. Admittedly I'm not the most adept at using web-sites, but the old one did seem much easier to find things like results, fixture lists, ranking lists etc
The more I think, the more confused I get...
- Gillian
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on the note of costs for events, i went to an AIRE Wednesday evening informal where i paid 50p (yep, i claimed student rate!) for my 3 runs totalling about 10km - roughly 1p/200m. that's the kind of costs i want to see! (and yes, before everyone tells me, i know it was only a training event, didn't have electronic punching and didn't really need much organisation, but it did have a new, pretty accurate map)
The reward of a thing well done is to have done it.
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Supersaint - team nopesport
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pah, we had to pay £2 (adult rate - they wouldn't give up the junior rate despite being students) on wednesday to run round a pretty crap area - only got 7 controls for my money too! Considering most CC's in the area give us junior rate which ends up as either £1.50 or £2 I wasn't best pleased forking out that for a measily wednesday evening event.
“Success is 99% failure� -- Soichiro Honda
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brooner - [nope] cartel
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brooner wrote:pah, we had to pay £2 (adult rate - they wouldn't give up the junior rate despite being students) on wednesday to run round a pretty crap area - only got 7 controls for my money too! Considering most CC's in the area give us junior rate which ends up as either £1.50 or £2 I wasn't best pleased forking out that for a measily wednesday evening event.
it's actually a BOF policy that students pay the reduced rate. I was speaking to Suse Coon (with her BOF councellor hat on) about this as I raised it at the SOA AGM last year that clubs didn't really know about it. She was going to take it to BOF that an email should be circulated among clubs that students pay the reduced fee. We might see knowledge of it yet!!
Andrew Dalgleish (INT)
Views expressed on Nopesport are my own.
Views expressed on Nopesport are my own.
- andy
- god
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Ouch!
You want to be a Chaser!
Training events every Tuesday thru' the summer, usually to practice a technique, but courses suitable for novices and experts, and novelty events, too. SI used to encourage juniors (if it's not out on hire), and all on the doorstep for most Chasers (an advantage of being a nucleated club). Best of all, it's FREE.
Different people planning/organising and gaining experience, all doing it voluntarily.
(We also have free circuit training/swimming all winter, and club runs once a week year round....).
In defence of my husband, he did say Mike Napier does a good job and has no complaints about his work at all. It's just a shame Stodge is not "tried and tested" in the eyes of the JK organising committee (despite doing every Chasers event for 2 years:FCC/UK Cup, JIRC's, CSC, YBT final next December and working professionally for SportIdent at Corporate Challenges). If he's not given the chance, how can he (or anyone else in the country) be "tried and tested" and be allowed to do it voluntarily, saving £££'s from entry fees for us?
You want to be a Chaser!
Training events every Tuesday thru' the summer, usually to practice a technique, but courses suitable for novices and experts, and novelty events, too. SI used to encourage juniors (if it's not out on hire), and all on the doorstep for most Chasers (an advantage of being a nucleated club). Best of all, it's FREE.
Different people planning/organising and gaining experience, all doing it voluntarily.
(We also have free circuit training/swimming all winter, and club runs once a week year round....).
In defence of my husband, he did say Mike Napier does a good job and has no complaints about his work at all. It's just a shame Stodge is not "tried and tested" in the eyes of the JK organising committee (despite doing every Chasers event for 2 years:FCC/UK Cup, JIRC's, CSC, YBT final next December and working professionally for SportIdent at Corporate Challenges). If he's not given the chance, how can he (or anyone else in the country) be "tried and tested" and be allowed to do it voluntarily, saving £££'s from entry fees for us?
Make the most of life - you're a long time dead.
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Stodgetta - brown
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brooner wrote:pah, we had to pay £2 (adult rate - they wouldn't give up the junior rate despite being students) on wednesday
You should definitely complain about this - students paying junior rates has been around for years now. Are there any students on the committee of whichever the organising club was to help make the case?
On the other hand, though, do you really think that it's that unreasonable to pay the cost of a pint of beer for entry to an event? After all, the costs of maps, planner's travel, possibly land access need to be covered, and I doubt that any club's informal evening events are intended to make a profit.
Stodgetta: I'm impressed to hear that WCH's evening events are free, but I'd guess this is only for club members, rather than anyone that turns up?
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MarkC - orange
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Having talked to members of the JK2005 committee it is obvious that they have gone for the safe option by employing Mike Napier. Who can blame them. They are trying to produce a great JK but the slightest problem with results and there will be all the whingers putting the event down. If I was on the committee I would certainly voted for Mike Napier as I believe and have been told that he is the best and also the only person with the multi day and relay experience required and of working with the commentary teams.
- Steler
- white
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Steler wrote:Having talked to members of the JK2005 committee it is obvious that they have gone for the safe option by employing Mike Napier. Who can blame them. They are trying to produce a great JK but the slightest problem with results and there will be all the whingers putting the event down. .
Yeah, and dad isn't safe - come on russ we're getting a east midlander when we have 2 west midlanders in stodge and dad who can do the job well enough
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rob f - yellow
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MarkC wrote:brooner wrote:pah, we had to pay £2 (adult rate - they wouldn't give up the junior rate despite being students) on wednesday
You should definitely complain about this - students paying junior rates has been around for years now. Are there any students on the committee of whichever the organising club was to help make the case?
On the other hand, though, do you really think that it's that unreasonable to pay the cost of a pint of beer for entry to an event? After all, the costs of maps, planner's travel, possibly land access need to be covered, and I doubt that any club's informal evening events are intended to make a profit.
It was FVO organising so perhaps they aren't as used to assisting students as the Edinburgh clubs are. I wouldn't mind paying £2 for a decent event, but this was a wee C5 on a country park and not nearly as enjoyable as the two CC's i had at the weekend which cost me a grand total of £3 for two days racing in quality terrain.
Ok, the maps for these had been printed for the event and as there wouldn't have been that many of them I think they might have cost as much as 50p a map. they were using control cards that were older than me so they can't have cost much or else would have been written off many moons ago. Are there any BOF levies on C5's?
“Success is 99% failure� -- Soichiro Honda
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brooner - [nope] cartel
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Are there any BOF levies on C5's?
The levy is calculated for all events (bar BOC and JK which are 'levied' via a proportion of the profits), but the first £X is then written off. I think that figure is around £50 at present, which means that the vast majority of C5s don't pay, maybe all?
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awk - god
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I also think you need to consider the scale of the event in question. Results at a 500 (if you are lucky) regional event is very very different from the JK (or British) with 3500.
When things go wrong they can go very wrong and get worse very quickly .....
In my mind this is why and when we need to consider paying people (and IT consultants are not cheap).
When things go wrong they can go very wrong and get worse very quickly .....
In my mind this is why and when we need to consider paying people (and IT consultants are not cheap).
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jonm - off string
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Trebor
What rubish are you talking now. Russ didn't make the decission, the JK 2005 committee made the decission, he's not on it. Anyway they can't think that bad of your dad, didn't they give him a major job anyway and I'm sure stodge would have been in the reconing if he had applied for that job. The thing is that neither have the experience of major multiday event and relays and working with the commentary team etc.
What rubish are you talking now. Russ didn't make the decission, the JK 2005 committee made the decission, he's not on it. Anyway they can't think that bad of your dad, didn't they give him a major job anyway and I'm sure stodge would have been in the reconing if he had applied for that job. The thing is that neither have the experience of major multiday event and relays and working with the commentary team etc.
- Steler
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