FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Cynthia Doyle
INDIANAPOLIS, IN (June 23, 2004) — At its June 15-16 annual meeting in
Indianapolis, Indiana, the National Federation of State High School
Associations (NFHS) Track and Field Rules Committee clarified the difference
between the number of entries and the number of competitions allowed for
high school track and field participants.
The clarification will provide track and field coaches greater or lesser
latitude for coaching strategies, depending on former practices within their
respective states. The committee reaffirmed a position that
permits high school athletes to participate in a maximum of four events per
track meet. Rule
4-2-1
allows a competitor to be entered into four individual (running and field)
events, along with being listed as an alternate on relays. Participation on
a relay team counts as one of the four events for the meet.
“To minimize risk, the committee has clearly defined the number of events
one may participate in during a single- or multiple-day meet,” said Cynthia
Doyle, NFHS assistant director and liaison to the NFHS Track and Field Rules
Committee. “However, this does not prevent participation in multi-events
such as decathlons, heptathlons or pentathlons.”
In other changes, Rule 3-2-4t now permits, by state association adoption,
the games committee at any high school track meet to use
a 34.92-degree sector for both shot put and discus throw.
The more common measurement for both shot put and discus has been a
40-degree sector on the inside or outside of the track oval.
High school rules allow a 60-degree sector in the discus and 65.5-degree
sector in the shot put when the events are located outside the track oval.
“The committee received information from experts indicating that a smaller
sector teaches athletes better control in throwing, and the committee agreed
that this is a viable option for high school track,” Doyle said. “In
addition, it is actually easier to mark the 34.92-degree sector than the
40-degree sector.”
The committee also modified rules pertaining to track and field uniforms.
Participants are now
permitted to wear bodysuits (unitards) in competition.
Previously, shorts were required at meets. The bodysuits must still meet
other NFHS uniform restrictions, including logo and color restrictions. They
can be either one- or two-piece suits.
A new penalty was also established by the committee. A warning,
disqualification from the event and then disqualification from the meet can
now be enforced if a coach or event official is not present when athletes
are warming up for throwing or jumping events.
“This penalty is consistent with other NFHS penalties, and is designed to
minimize risk at NFHS track events,” said NFHS Track and Field Rules
Committee Chairman Mike Colbrese, executive director of the Washington
Interscholastic Activities Association.
Track and field is the third-most popular sport among
boys and the second-most popular sport among girls at the high school level
with 913,629 combined participants during the 2002-03
season, according to the High School Athletics Participation Survey
conducted by the NFHS. It also ranks second in school sponsorship for both
boys and girls, with more than 15,000 schools offering the sport.