Hey Although I am new to these forums doesn't mean I am new to the game and how Skill levels SHOULD work. the team in question has been around for 4 years, in a Chester county PA division: the guy who was a 3 for forever was recruited because In everyones eyes he'd never go up to a 4 this is because of his constant missing horrible positioning, and all around stupid ways of shooting, we had the following SK levels 6, 6, 5, 5,5,4,3,3, this was until the meeting,(then one of our 3's went to a 4 unjustly) now I am not even complaining the two 5's that are questionable: just the 3 which we needed, because our other 3 was out of town. so because of the guy going up which we didnt notice until the middle of the match we had to forfeit, so we played Myself (6) another 6, two 4's now It debateable whether the guy who beat me is better than a 4 but I'd say with 4 inning in 3 games a case can be made, (maybe this should have been mentioned in the secret meeting.) it seems that by trying to make a somewhat sarcastic LO biased set of statements based on what I said. that this is a defense mechanism... so I will say this, my conscience is clear and I dont go around trying to raise peoples skill level, so that the team breaks apart and has to form another team....I know this is to make more money for you guys, but at the expense of being fair is what i cant stand. raise people based on actual skill not because of complaining. I could go on but I think you get my point
See, I was just trying to give everyone an example of what goes through the mind of a league operator when they read posts like yours and others here. I really wasn't trying to pick on you. But you made my point. "...just the 3 which we needed, because our other 3 was out of town. so because of the guy going up which we didnt notice until the middle of the match we had to forfeit...". You didn't mention that in your first post, and led folks to believe that the LO had it in for you by making it so you HAD to forfeit. This is an example of the story being told one way to serve the purposes of the storyteller.