Because high school athletes are not as skilled and developed as college athletes.
Because high school facilities (clocks, video cameras, administration, staffing) are not as extensive and developed as colleges.
Because high school resources vary wildly between programs, states, and regions.
Because many college rules are developed to please coaches and TV networks, not to teach and improve the sport itself.
Because the editorial resources to write and develop rule changes have proven not up to the task when the NFHS Rules Committee decides it wants to parrot an NCAA rule.
Is that enough or should I go on?
So if an NCAA rule is objectively a better rule than NFHS that has proven to make the game better at the higher levels, is it your position that it should not be adopted simply because it’s an NCAA rule?
Because that’s the position of many HS officials on this forum – we shouldn’t adopt NCAA rules simply because they are NCAA rules. That is completely asinine.
I would contend that almost every rule change that trickles down from the higher levels is a good one.
- 40 second play clock
- Intentional grounding exception
- Enforcement of offensive penalties behind the line of scrimmage
All of those changes have been positive for the game. None of them have anything to do with money, or the skill level of the athletes at the HS level, or any of the other arguments you made.
I’m genuinely curious what rule changes that NFHS has “stolen” from NCAA have made the HS game worse. I can’t think of any.
I will 100% agree that the NFHS writers are horrendous at writing trickle-down rules into the book, but that doesn’t mean the changes shouldn’t be adopted.
And I have also supported NFHS NOT adopting rule changes that cost schools significant money – like the 10-second runoff which would require a referee microphone. But almost none of the rules that actually get passed at the HS level cost money, so that’s a really irrelevant point.