Fatcow Icon
Football playoff pod system scrapped
by Shawn Stinson
Dec 06, 2012 | 4817 views | 6 6 comments | 21 21 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Contributed by Jimmy McDonald
Richmond Senior coach Paul Hoggard was pleased to hear the North Carolina High School Athletic Association elected to do away with the pod system in the higher classifications.
Contributed by Jimmy McDonald Richmond Senior coach Paul Hoggard was pleased to hear the North Carolina High School Athletic Association elected to do away with the pod system in the higher classifications.
slideshow

ROCKINGHAM — After using the pod system to place and seed teams for the football playoffs over the last three seasons, the North Carolina High School Athletic Association voted to eliminate it Thursday afternoon for all classifications except the 1A level.

The News and Observer first reported the decision via Twitter.

“Thank goodness,” Richmond coach Paul Hoggard said. “Although this year it worked out well for us. We have more in common with teams in the East than in the West.”

This season, the Raiders grabbed the No. 1 seed in the Mideast pod despite finishing second in the Southeastern Conference. Because of this, the team was able to have home-field advantage through the first three rounds of the playoffs.

One of the biggest flaws Hoggard pointed out in the pod system, which was created to cut down on travel in the early rounds, was it created a “conference tournament” look to the opening round contests. The 4AA Mideast pod was filled with four teams from the Southeastern Conference — Hoke County, Lumberton, Pinecrest and Richmond. The Bucks and the Patriots played in the regular season finale, before meeting again a week later in the first round.

“Awesome…it really took away the playoff feel for the kids,” Pinecrest coach Chris Metzger said. “Going back to the old way is a better situation definitely.”

Before the NCHSAA switched to the pod system, Richmond would have received the fourth seed in the East and opened the postseason at home against Laney. A victory would have matched the Raiders against Jack Britt in the second round, instead of the third. The winner of that contest would have battled Garner in the third round, as opposed to the East Regional final.

Moving back to the previous way of seeding teams for the playoffs will not eliminate rematches especially in the first two rounds, but it will cut down on them. The 4AA Mideast pod for example featured three return contests this season — Green Hope-Fuquay-Varina, Lumberton-Jack Britt and of course Pinecrest-Hoke. The only rematches which would have have occurred in the previous format were: Jack Britt-Pinecrest and Wakefield-Heritage.

“When you get into the playoffs, you want to play someone you haven’t played,” Hoggard said. “There is no perfect way to do it. When they created this, they said in the beginning the North Carolina Football Coaches Association was for it, which is untrue. We were never in favor of it. I should know, I was on the board of directors at the time.”

Hoggard trying to finalize schedule

Hoggard said he is close to putting the final touches on the schedule for the next two years. He and athletic director Kevin Mabe thought they had it completed after a handful of schools agreed to renew contracts to continue meeting on the gridiron, but were forced to scramble to find teams when those deals feel though.

The Raiders are still searching for two opponents. Until Thursday, Hoggard was looking for an opponent for next season’s opener, but he said that vacancy was filled when Rocky River agreed to play.

The remainder of the schedule has Richmond traveling to Myrtle Beach, S.C. in Week 2 to play the Seahawks, while it will renew its rivalry with Jack Britt in Week 4 before taking on traditional rival Anson in Week 6. After a bye week, the Raiders will begin Southeastern Conference play.

Sports editor Shawn Stinson can be reached at 910-997-3111, ext. 14, or by email at sstinson@heartlandpublications.com.



Comments
(6)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
|
December 13, 2012
...lol...nobody ever "feared" Richmond.....you people are living in a fantasy world.....you are extremely igonarant to think Richmond is going to win a state title every year.....reality is other teams from year to year are more talented then Richmond....I know that is hard for some of you to comprehend but it's the truth!....you coach what you've got!
|
December 12, 2012
I think we would have beat Garner. But I doubt we could have come close to beating Butler. Butler beat Britt 56 to 28. No one fears Richmond anymore.
|
December 09, 2012
These coaches were hired to maintain the excellence and tradition that had been established over many successful years at Richmond. First and foremost is maintaining a winning tradition. Raider fans are the 1st to notice when the program starts to drop off. Right now it is in a freefall. These guys can't coach at the highest levels. No matter how Mother Teresa like they and their supporters claim they are, they've done all they are capable of doing. They've had their one season of " Raider Magic ". The Raider Nation and Program can have both! Coaches who are capable of winning and improving the program. We need top of the line coaches for a top of the line program. This program needs to start turning around now! If not you will see how quickly a program can die. I'm Watching!
|
December 09, 2012
FakeCoach, if you don't like what you've got in Richmond County, go support someone else.We're watching YOU make a jacka.. out of yourself every time you post.
|
December 07, 2012
The high school association rolled out the red carpet for the Raiders this year. They should have strolled to the title game. What we witnessed was defensive coaching ineptness and a bunch of player blaming because of being outcoached by the other teams staff. The Richmond program is at a crossroads right now. This situation is draining the life out of what was once one of the model programs in the state if not the whole southeast. These people are living off one season when a whole lot of Raider Magic won a game in which they had been out coached. Any coach can come in here and win eight or nine games every year. The real test is what you do when it counts in the big games and the playoffs. They've killed off " Raider Magic ", They're killing Raider support and enthusiasm, They've got what used to be proud Raider fans quoting winning percentages like they actually mean something. I guess you can get some people to accept being average and mediocre. Real Raider fans remember what it felt like to be a part of real Raider football. What we've got right now " Aint It ". The Adminstration that is backing this deal needs to be looked at through a harsher light. Change is what is needed. " If You're Not Getting Better, You're getting Worse ". Think about it! Later!
|
December 08, 2012
Look real coach if u have a better solution for raider football please apply for the position of head ciach. Having only met the head coach one time I discovered a man who is all about winning in more ways those one, your blank mind is all about football. Maybe that is the one word you can spell. For coach and his staff and the new principal nothing but respect but true dedication winnining or losing because you are not gonna find two better humans period in 5 counties to run this program. If you are the man apply. !!!!!!!!

Weather
Sponsored By:

Lottery
Sponsored By:

Stocks
Sponsored By:

Gas Prices
Sponsored By:

Featured Businesses
Recipes
Sponsored By: