Music at meets
Music at meets
I see music at international meets in the high jump and pole vault. Does anyone know if boom boxes are allowed at meets? Can a vaulter play a cd while he/she is vaulting?
Thanks,
George
Thanks,
George
- ladyvolspvcoach
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music
During the D1 meets NO electronic devices are allowed on the field.....
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No, D1 means Division 1 NCAA collegiate vaulting. High Schools as far as my experience goes does not have such a rule..
Re: music
ladyvolspvcoach wrote:No, D1 means Division 1 NCAA collegiate vaulting. High Schools as far as my experience goes does not have such a rule..
You will get busted in TX at meets that matter (district, regional, state) for electronic devices, so it probably is a HS rule nationwide.
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Re: music
GeorgeN wrote:Thank you. Is a D1 meet a high school meet? And does this change for open meets?
I am a hs coach, but I plan to compete in masters pv meets starting in January.
George
I believe it depends on your state/section rules. I know in NYS Section V with indoor track athletes once the meet has started aren't allowed to wear headsets while warming up nor are boom boxes allowed. I can't remember the exact rules for outdoor but I believe it’s the same. I haven’t seen an athlete dq'd or anything for sitting around with some sort of head set before so as far as I know that’s allowed.
Head set: some sort of personal player device i.e. mp3, personal cd player, etc.
music
So as far as we know, music for the the athletes is only allowed at open international meets?
I have been watching on OLN, and in Paris, Stockholm, ect the jumpers could play music in order to psyche themselves up while performing their event.
I have been watching on OLN, and in Paris, Stockholm, ect the jumpers could play music in order to psyche themselves up while performing their event.
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Re: music
GeorgeN wrote:I just wonder if it is in the High school rule book that music can or cannot be played during a meet.
And where does it become legal ( if it does), is it international meets only?
There is a huge difference between playing music at a "meet" verses playing music at an "event venue".
Remember those Games Committee people, the "GC"? They can and do per NFHS or NCAA rules restrict the use of electronic devices. That means everything from A to Z and all in between if you get the drift. What you call music falls into this broad catagory.
I've never been to a meet held in the US was this rule was ever waived.
Now, I have have been to many meets where music is played during the meet. It's played by some desginated meet managment person and it is approved by the "GC". The big difference is it's played over the field speaker system for all to hear (whether they like it or not) and not at any specific event.
The real answer to your question is, no you cannot use a boom box at your event venue without "GC" permission and I doubt that would ever be granted.
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