Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Looks like the movement toward college rules is continuing.  Favor most of these, but will mean more consideration for tight gym space and overlapping mats in terms of out of bounds.  I do wish they had increased a major to 10 to accompany the increased scoring values, and since HS lacks replay, I would have preferred the NF progression to have greater differentials in time/swipes (ie 2 = 2, but make 3 pts require 4 swipes and 4 pts would need 6 seconds).  

NEWS RELEASE

 

Participants Now Inbounds with One Point of Contact in High School Wrestling

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE          Contact: Elliot Hopkins

INDIANAPOLIS, IN (April 25, 2024) — Beginning with the 2024-25 season, high school wrestlers will be inbounds with only one point of contact of either wrestler inside or on the boundary line.

This fundamental change to high school wrestling was one of six major changes impacting almost 30 rules recommended by the NFHS Wrestling Rules Committee at its April 1-3 meeting in Indianapolis. All recommended changes were subsequently approved by the NFHS Board of Directors.

Previously, high school wrestlers were considered to be inbounds if a total of two supporting points of either wrestler were inside or on the boundary line. The two supporting points could be two supporting points of one wrestler or one supporting point of each wrestler inside or on the boundary line.

“Without increasing risk, this change eliminates the subjectivity of the out-of-bounds call,” said Elliot Hopkins, NFHS director of sports and student services and liaison to the Wrestling Rules Committee. “The change also helps officials to call ‘out of bounds’ more consistently, and it provides wrestlers, coaches and spectators a better understanding of out of bounds.”

While the One Point of Contact change will be noted under the definition of Inbounds in Rule 5-15, it also impacts a number of other sections in Rule 5 on Definitions, as well as Rule 6-4-1 on Stopping and Starting the Match.

In addition to the One Point of Contact change, points awarded for a Near-Fall have been revised in high school wrestling. Overall, the changes simplify the points awarded based on how long the wrestler is held in near-fall criteria. The change in Rule 5-11-3 is as follows:

Two points will be awarded when near-fall criteria are held for two seconds, three points for three seconds, four points for four seconds and five points if the defensive wrestler is injured, indicates an injury or bleeding occurs after the four-point near-fall has been earned. These changes will affect other rules including individual match scoring in Rule 9. 

“The goal in wrestling is to pin the opponent,” Hopkins said. “Changing the near-fall points should motivate wrestlers to work for a fall.”

In another change in scoring rules, opportunities to earn more points will also be available when executing a Takedown. Beginning next season, wrestlers will be awarded three match points instead of two when securing a takedown. 

The committee also approved a change regarding the Technical Fall. Rule 5-11-4a now states that “if a takedown or reversal, straight to a near-fall criteria creates a 15-point advantage, the match shall continue until the near-fall criteria is no longer met. Conclusion of the near-fall criteria is immediate.” The change clarifies when the technical fall has concluded in relation to the near-fall criteria being met. Hopkins said the offensive wrestler cannot be penalized appropriately after the technical fall has been earned.

In another change, the 10-Foot Circle at the center of wrestling mats is now optional. Wrestlers now will be encouraged to “stay in the center of the mat” instead of “within the 10-foot circle.”

“The committee determined that the starting lines of a mat indicate the center of the mat and the 10-foot circle is no longer needed,” Hopkins said. “With the new mat designs that have a large mascot or logos, it gives a refreshing look to the mats. Wrestlers and officials know where the center of the mat is located without the 10-foot circle.”

Finally, the committee approved a new Referee’s Time-Out Signal. The signal, which is used in many other sports, is both hands/fingers pointing inward to the referee’s chest.

A complete listing of the wrestling rules changes will be available on the NFHS website at www.nfhs.org. Click on “Activities & Sports” at the top of the home page and select “Wrestling.”

According to the 2022-23 NFHS High School Athletics Participation Survey, wrestling is the sixth-most popular sport for boys with 259,431 participants in 10,962 schools. It also continues to gain popularity among girls with 50,016 participants in 6,545 schools nationwide. 

 

Online link to article: https://www.nfhs.org/articles/participants-now-inbounds-with-one-point-of-contact-in-high-school-wrestling/

 

  • Bob 1
Posted

Love all the changes. I do agree major should be 10 and tech should be 20. I like that they have the swipes equal to the number of points… keeps it easy for fans

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted
On 4/25/2024 at 9:01 PM, Eagle26 said:

Love all the changes. I do agree major should be 10 and tech should be 20. I like that they have the swipes equal to the number of points… keeps it easy for fans

At the high school level I don't agree with 20 point techs. There is huge skill variations at the high school level and with one person up by 15 points I think that is sufficient to end the match. Some matches are already unbearable to watch when a kid with much superior skill plays catch and release against a much weaker opponent. I for one do not want to see a kid get embarrassed and taken down 10 times at will. 

Posted (edited)
On 4/25/2024 at 9:01 PM, Eagle26 said:

Love all the changes. I do agree major should be 10 and tech should be 20. I like that they have the swipes equal to the number of points… keeps it easy for fans

It makes sense.  Not sure if it is "easier" for anyone--- fans, refs, or coaches.  

"Did he swipe 3 times or ony 2?"

"Your swipes are too slow!"

etc.

Yes, you have some of these questions now but they will be exacerbated by having two, three, and four point near falls.  The difference between 2 and 4 is only two seconds.

Edited by Interviewed_at_Weehawken
Posted
On 5/21/2024 at 12:44 PM, JVStateChamp said:

At the high school level I don't agree with 20 point techs. There is huge skill variations at the high school level and with one person up by 15 points I think that is sufficient to end the match. Some matches are already unbearable to watch when a kid with much superior skill plays catch and release against a much weaker opponent. I for one do not want to see a kid get embarrassed and taken down 10 times at will. 

Well right now, a tech fall from the “take him down, let him up game” would take 15 take downs. Under the new 3 point takedown, if we made it a 20 pt tech fall, it would only take 10. So it’s still a huge improvement from what we have now. I’m not totally opposed to keeping it at 15, but I think 20 is more consistent.

Posted
On 5/21/2024 at 1:00 PM, Interviewed_at_Weehawken said:

It makes sense.  Not sure if it is "easier" for anyone--- fans, refs, or coaches.  

"Did he swipe 3 times or ony 2?"

"Your swipes are too slow!"

etc.

Yes, you have some of these questions now but they will be exacerbated by having two, three, and four point near falls.  The difference between 2 and 4 is only two seconds.

I just meant that the scoring is easier for a casual fan to understand than the current high school rules. 

Posted
On 5/21/2024 at 1:00 PM, Interviewed_at_Weehawken said:

It makes sense.  Not sure if it is "easier" for anyone--- fans, refs, or coaches.  

"Did he swipe 3 times or ony 2?"

"Your swipes are too slow!"

etc.

Yes, you have some of these questions now but they will be exacerbated by having two, three, and four point near falls.  The difference between 2 and 4 is only two seconds.

I thought the same thing with them doing this in college this year. I was wondering if there would be a lot of challenges both ways trying to get a point or get one taken off. However, I did not see any and there were honestly very few 3 counts as most were 2 or 4 with little to no complaints.

  • Bob 1
Posted
9 minutes ago, BobDole said:

I thought the same thing with them doing this in college this year. I was wondering if there would be a lot of challenges both ways trying to get a point or get one taken off. However, I did not see any and there were honestly very few 3 counts as most were 2 or 4 with little to no complaints.

I might have seen 1 3 point nf.

  • Bob 1
  • Brain 1
Posted
16 hours ago, BobDole said:

I thought the same thing with them doing this in college this year. I was wondering if there would be a lot of challenges both ways trying to get a point or get one taken off. However, I did not see any and there were honestly very few 3 counts as most were 2 or 4 with little to no complaints.

I think the problem with that is: there are way more high school coaches who do not understand the rules or interpretations.  Many high school coaches thought that it was 3 swipes for a 2 point nearfall in recent years!

  • Bob 1
  • 4 weeks later...
Posted
On 5/23/2024 at 6:27 AM, Interviewed_at_Weehawken said:

I think the problem with that is: there are way more high school coaches who do not understand the rules or interpretations.  Many high school coaches thought that it was 3 swipes for a 2 point nearfall in recent years!

You nailed it! I have encountered that and recently too! 

I still run into coaches who think that when wrestler A sits out, then wrestler B can come around the body and lock hands, because they have an arm. UGH

  • Bob 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...