I'll give my opinion on each of these 5 proposals:Gianluca Ferrero wrote:
first: if the cone was hitted in center or from the outside of the course8in this last case,as always could see and remember what it was in the past,racer has to be DQ
second: used official judges and signed each cone with a number and give each judge a section from n. to n.
third: using also digital images for helping them
fourth:NUMBER OF CONES-simply if more tan 4 cones are hitted in row sequentially DQ or more than 12% if number of cones and time are more than 50 or final time up to 20 sec.
For longer races to be decided and written in the invitation ,after speaking with ISSA Coordinators and course setting men choosed.
FIFTH: ALL ORGANIZERS OR SO CALLED HAVE TO USE ISSA organisation and Our Federation to make things easier with no doubt and for the future of slalomracing.
1) Disagree: Judging which side the cone was hit on is not practical. It prevents the strategic "criddling" of a cone. If this were in place, nearly every cone would have to be examined using item #3 (digital images) and it would slow down the race.
2) Agree: World Championship races should probably have non-racer cone judges with assigned cones.
3) Disagree: Digital imaging (or any imaging) should not be required. It should also not be ALLOWED. I agree with FIFA in this respect ... replay should not be used for decisions of the referee and the cone judges. Who is going to obtain and inspect those images? Will you accept images from outside sources? What is the timeline for inspecting the images? What is the penalty to the racer should his "instant replay challenge" fail to yeild a result?
4) Let the organizer decide: The race organizer should decide what constitutes a DQ cone-count for a particular race.
5) I think we (ISSA) should offer some advantage to the racers and the promoters if they run by the ISSA rules. I believe the advantage we should offer them is the use of the ISSA name in promotional materials, and the inclusion of the event in the ISSA World Ranking System.