So an issue came up this weekend about a previous weekends game that I did not attend. One of the players on our "B" team overshot another player by his opinion.
Now here was the deal. The other player in a previous game had gone and bunkered the team players kid. He is 11 and is on the field playing. That in itself means that he is willing to put himself to the same risk as anyone else. The "other kid" did a run by and shot him with a few balls up close. I personally would not have done it, but hey it happens.
So then the father comes in next game and pulls a run-by on "other kid" and shoots him in the back a few times. He gets up screaming, unfair, overshooting, etc. etc.
So I guess that it was ok for him to run by and shoot some little kid a few times in the back, but when it was done to him, it is suddenly overshooting?
I kind of have to laugh about it. Should we all wear a big sign that has a number for the amount of balls it will take for us to start whining?
I kind of feel like in open play in most situations and with the markers out today that three or four balls are pretty much to be expected. In a tourney I can expect to be hit many more times than that up to the point I get behind the dead box.
What about that point that I am doing my dead walk to the side of the field or to the dead box. Am I supposed to be mad at those players for shooting me when I am "out" ?
Where do we make this decision? Is the little kid who is shooting a PM6 immune from the exact same medicine that he would gladly dole out to another player?
How about the guy on field with a pump. Should we adjust our ROF just beacuse he can only shoot us with one or two?
Or do we as players accept that when we walk on todays field that we may just get mowed, and if we don't like getting overshot that we might find another sport to play?
Now here was the deal. The other player in a previous game had gone and bunkered the team players kid. He is 11 and is on the field playing. That in itself means that he is willing to put himself to the same risk as anyone else. The "other kid" did a run by and shot him with a few balls up close. I personally would not have done it, but hey it happens.
So then the father comes in next game and pulls a run-by on "other kid" and shoots him in the back a few times. He gets up screaming, unfair, overshooting, etc. etc.
So I guess that it was ok for him to run by and shoot some little kid a few times in the back, but when it was done to him, it is suddenly overshooting?
I kind of have to laugh about it. Should we all wear a big sign that has a number for the amount of balls it will take for us to start whining?
I kind of feel like in open play in most situations and with the markers out today that three or four balls are pretty much to be expected. In a tourney I can expect to be hit many more times than that up to the point I get behind the dead box.
What about that point that I am doing my dead walk to the side of the field or to the dead box. Am I supposed to be mad at those players for shooting me when I am "out" ?
Where do we make this decision? Is the little kid who is shooting a PM6 immune from the exact same medicine that he would gladly dole out to another player?
How about the guy on field with a pump. Should we adjust our ROF just beacuse he can only shoot us with one or two?
Or do we as players accept that when we walk on todays field that we may just get mowed, and if we don't like getting overshot that we might find another sport to play?
The industry has led us to guns with 28-40 BPS cycling, which is nothing anyone would ever need, to sell more paint. Do we really need that? Have we ever? I've been to tournaments (and played in them) where the back line guys are standing there for ten minutes doing nothing but hosing paint. I realize the point of this is to keep opponents down whilst the front men move and gain angles, but this is really lame. Not to mention, dangerous. Who wants to get overshot 10-12 times because someone cannot control how fast they are pulling the trigger?

Comment