Recognize winners for their PERFORMANCE only, whoever they are, WHATever they are,
regardless where they came from, who their ancestors were, their victim status, their handicaps, how much sympathy they're entitled to.
What would be wrong with any match-up, no matter what the differences, as long as the contenders are of about equal ranking based on past performance? Give a specific horror story that would happen as a result.
That approach has a fairly predictable outcome, which I think should produce at least a bit of hesitation. Let's start with a more dramatic scenario, where there are no age limits. So you would have a fully grown adult competing in a track race against a 6-year old. Who is going to win? I think it's pretty clearly 99.99999% of the time, the adult is going to win.
7-year-old? 8-year-old?
You're ignoring individual exceptional cases. There's no reason a particular 6-year-old who is exceptional could not be extra fast and thus able to compete against an adult.
And do you also exclude someone who is too old? What if an 80-year-old stays in shape and can outrace a 20-year-old?
The match-up is proper as long as the contenders have demonstrated about equal performance in their previous competitions -- in which case it would be difficult to predict who will win. The proper merit-based standard should be that the match-ups are between contenders who are about equal, based on their previous competitions.
So, in aggregate, the adults win, and move forward, and the children lose and are removed from competition.
No, everyone continues to compete against those of their same level -- NOT AGE LEVEL -- based on past performance, having equal past performers compete against each other. All of them keep competing, and as they get better, they move up in the rankings and eventually compete at the higher levels. No one is "removed" from anything other than from competing way up at higher levels than that of their demonstrated past performance level.
Looking at their continued stats over time, you'll see consistent wins for the adults, and consistent losses for children.
No, not ALL the children. A few will do better than the others, and they will move up to higher levels. A few will do so well that they will be able to compete against some of the adults. What's wrong with that? Only those showing much higher performance level will move up to the higher levels. Why shouldn't a few, maybe only 1%, or .1%, of children be allowed to compete against adults if they are that much better?
The result ends up being that the children end up not being allowed to compete... which also, by the way, ends up meaning that . . .
Cut it out! they will continue competing at their level, against others who rank about equally with them, and as some of them get better in their performance, they will be moved up to higher levels to compete against the higher performers, whoever they are.
. . . ends up meaning that those children aren't provided an opportunity to improve their skills even if they are an exceptional runner for a child.
No, they will keep competing at their level, trying to improve their performance, and ranking, so that they can slowly move up to higher levels of performance, to be matched up with other contenders who perform at their level, to however high they can perform against others at the higher performance levels.
The net result is that children end up crowded out of competition altogether.
No, the competitions continue at all the levels, high and low. The only downside is that the very poor performers will stay at the lower levels and won't get much recognition, in the form of awards or prizes, etc. So what? Those who have talent and work harder will improve and move higher in the rankings and have a chance to win some recognition based on their performance.
I swam competitively as a child. I was pretty good at it - for a child.
Then you would have a higher ranking than average for your age level. Meaning you could compete against some of those older than you. What's wrong with that? As you continue to compete and get better, your ranking would increase and you would continue competing against others older than you.
If I were competing against adults, or even against much older teenagers, rather than kids in my own age bracket, I would consistently lose.
No, you'd be matched up against others of about equal performance level as yourself, so you'd sometimes win.
I would fall out of the competitions, heck I wouldn't . . .
Stop insisting on something to whine about. You'd stay in the competitions with those of your own performance level.
. . . I wouldn't even qualify for them in the first place.
Why not? You would always qualify to compete against others of your performance level. The rule has to be that EVERYONE competes who wants to, no matter who or what they are, and they are matched up against others of about their same performance level, based on past competitions. Everyone automatically qualifies for competitions against those of about the same performance level in their past competitions.
And I guarantee I would have quit swimming quite quickly, because there's no real opportunity for me to compete there.
You would have had MORE opportunity, because you'd be allowed to compete against those a little older, if you're about as good as they are, based on your past performance. Because these rules would allow ALL competition between those of equal (or near-equal) ability, regardless of anything else.
What if you took the same approach to car races? All cars, with no restrictions or classes, all compete against each other and the best car wins.
No, there would be match-ups having the better performers compete against better performers. ALL would compete at different performing levels, and those who improve (by increasing their wins) would move to higher levels to compete against the better performers. The restriction would be that you move higher only as you continue to win more, i.e., showing better performance.
(Our topic is about the NCAA, which might not include car races. In private contest events there would be all kinds of categories, or classes, such as vintage cars, special rules about what's allowed and what's not. That's not collegiate sports.)
It might be interesting for a season, but it would get boring after a while.
No, it would become more interesting as all the best performers are allowed to compete against each other, rather than restricting them to certain categories that exclude some match-ups between the better performers who happen to be in the wrong category. The only boring part would be the match-ups between the worst performers, whose events might draw very small crowds of spectators. But if they want a larger crowd, they have to improve their performance, so they move up in the rankings and compete against the better performers, and these ones would draw more spectators than the poor performers.
"boring"?
Here's a real example of what's boring, which I witnessed. In a Little League game there was one kid so much bigger and stronger than the others (but within the age classification) that in one single game he pitched a no-hitter and also hit 2 home-runs.* He single-handedly mowed down that other team.
What they should have done was put him in a higher-level of competition so he could play against other kids of his own performance level, even though he'd be a year or 2 younger than the others. There is no reason to artificially put all those of the same age level into the same competitions, if some are much more advanced than the others.
If we're talking about drag races, the funny cars are going to win, and nothing else will ever be able to take part in it. If we're talking about road races, it will be F1. There would be no more NASCAR. No more Indy Car. No more Stock Car.
I don't think we're talking about those. This is about NCAA sports mainly.
Sounds like it would be boring... as well as very effectively stifling competition.
No, more competition is the point. Allow competitions between everyone, of ALL groups no matter what, with no barriers or class divisions putting contenders into different categories that restrict the competitions to only members of this or that group. The only restriction should be that the match-ups are between contenders who are of about equal ability, rather than having very high performers matched up against those of very low performance level.
Spectators, fans, enthusiasts of all kinds would still have all kinds of private contest events to attend, to promote whatever odd competitions they find entertaining.
*
I'm lying. It might have been only one home run he hit in that game. But I heard of other games he played where he hit multiple home runs.