The system needs work -- from us
I sympathize with the member who is ready to throw in the towel on the AMCA judging. I have personally had a 99 point bike go to an 86 and back up to a 98 3/4 in the course of three shows - with nothing being done to the bike in the interim. I have recently had a bike go from 87 1/2 to 57 1/2 after having corrected the errors found in the first judging. Bottom line is that while the judges work very hard and we need to support them, the members work just as hard to get it right -- sometimes at great expense -- and someone needs to support them. If the difference of opinon between two judges can be off by 10 or 20 points then our judging system is flawed and we need to address it before we lose more members. We need the AMCA awards to have distinction and respect. Under the present system, this is not happening.
I understand that we can have differences from one judge to the next. I believe our system can support a margin of error that is based on knowledge and fact. What it cannot bear is the weight of a system whereby the judge's opinion does not have any review and is not subject to scrutiny until someone objects. By that time, the damage is done. For example, we need a method where the scoring sheets are reviewed for proper procedure before the scores are recorded. On two occasions, I have fallen victim to a judge who has taken multiple points off in multiple categories for hardware. One category -- one score is the way the system is supposed to work. On another occasion I had 4 points taken off for "improper seat hardware". My understanding is that I could show up without a seat and only lose 4 points. The important point here is that the seat hardware was exactly as shown in the parts manual. That should be good enough for any of our judges. If the sheets were being reviewed for gross errors such as this before the scores are recorded, then we just might improve our system -- and our reputation.
I also believe the originally stated judging period of 10 minutes should be enforced. I watched a judge spend 35 minutes on one of my entries and then complain about how many bikes he had to judge. He also made 6 mistakes with regard to points off that cost me an award. I spent several hours putting together documentation to refute this judge's opinion for the next judge. Why can't we find a method whereby the judge's opinion can be challenged prior to recording the scores? Not by argument and shouting but by presentation of documents such as service manuals and parts explosions. I have witnessed some fine judging since joining this organization but I have also witnessed judging by people who had no business passing judgment on a bike. No one wants to be screwed by a judge that simply does not have the facts. That is our biggest problem as I see it.
I guess this rant could continue but I believe the time has come for all of us to look at our system with the intention of making it better. I am proud to be a member of this organization and I want to keep it that way. As long as I believe we are trying to improve, then I will continue to work toward that goal. The unfortunate aspect of this is that we will never know how many good members we lost because of the flaws in our system. It will never be perfect but it can be a damn site better than it is.
I think all of us should give Kevin and Robyn our support and suggestions for how things can be improved. If we work together on this, we will never hear of a member throwing in the towel because of poor judging again. That is my goal.
I sympathize with the member who is ready to throw in the towel on the AMCA judging. I have personally had a 99 point bike go to an 86 and back up to a 98 3/4 in the course of three shows - with nothing being done to the bike in the interim. I have recently had a bike go from 87 1/2 to 57 1/2 after having corrected the errors found in the first judging. Bottom line is that while the judges work very hard and we need to support them, the members work just as hard to get it right -- sometimes at great expense -- and someone needs to support them. If the difference of opinon between two judges can be off by 10 or 20 points then our judging system is flawed and we need to address it before we lose more members. We need the AMCA awards to have distinction and respect. Under the present system, this is not happening.
I understand that we can have differences from one judge to the next. I believe our system can support a margin of error that is based on knowledge and fact. What it cannot bear is the weight of a system whereby the judge's opinion does not have any review and is not subject to scrutiny until someone objects. By that time, the damage is done. For example, we need a method where the scoring sheets are reviewed for proper procedure before the scores are recorded. On two occasions, I have fallen victim to a judge who has taken multiple points off in multiple categories for hardware. One category -- one score is the way the system is supposed to work. On another occasion I had 4 points taken off for "improper seat hardware". My understanding is that I could show up without a seat and only lose 4 points. The important point here is that the seat hardware was exactly as shown in the parts manual. That should be good enough for any of our judges. If the sheets were being reviewed for gross errors such as this before the scores are recorded, then we just might improve our system -- and our reputation.
I also believe the originally stated judging period of 10 minutes should be enforced. I watched a judge spend 35 minutes on one of my entries and then complain about how many bikes he had to judge. He also made 6 mistakes with regard to points off that cost me an award. I spent several hours putting together documentation to refute this judge's opinion for the next judge. Why can't we find a method whereby the judge's opinion can be challenged prior to recording the scores? Not by argument and shouting but by presentation of documents such as service manuals and parts explosions. I have witnessed some fine judging since joining this organization but I have also witnessed judging by people who had no business passing judgment on a bike. No one wants to be screwed by a judge that simply does not have the facts. That is our biggest problem as I see it.
I guess this rant could continue but I believe the time has come for all of us to look at our system with the intention of making it better. I am proud to be a member of this organization and I want to keep it that way. As long as I believe we are trying to improve, then I will continue to work toward that goal. The unfortunate aspect of this is that we will never know how many good members we lost because of the flaws in our system. It will never be perfect but it can be a damn site better than it is.
I think all of us should give Kevin and Robyn our support and suggestions for how things can be improved. If we work together on this, we will never hear of a member throwing in the towel because of poor judging again. That is my goal.
Comment