Slavex said:
it would be neat if there was an option to hire someone to work for you, that might generate some bucks for the various clubs too.
At the nationals this year, there was a young fellow who hired himself out to two people to patch for them on their work days. (I think one had to work at his real job and the other felt he was too ill to work) I think he got $100 for the day from each. Kid got money, match got help. Both guys still got to shoot, sounds like win-win-win...
Continuing Sponsorship...this comment really stung -
relliott said:
"Actually, I have a real problem with people bribing their way out of working and then showing up fresh as a peach to shoot when everyone else has a day of humping it in the hot sun under their belts. It's an unfair advantage. Not everyone can afford to pay the sponsorship fee, and if everyone could there would still be no one to work the match. I think everyone should work, or everyone should not work. No in between. Of course if no one works there's no match, so no problem....right?
Rob, have a look at the commotion at the table at the end of the day and during lunch; it is by no means a chance for me to sit on my butt and show up the next day
fresh as a peach. Add into that this year that I was on the range helping the MD hours before you showed up and hours after you went home, I'd say that your comment is not only a miss, but a no-shoot.
One major reason I choose not to work on the ranges anymore is the perceived conflict of interest. If I DQ a good customer, I might loose that customer. If I have a close call that I chose not to DQ someone (due to my vantage point, it was OK) and its a good customer, I might be accused of favoritism and loose some other customer. In fact, I was asked if I would be available for an arbitration committee last year at a L3 last year and declined due to the fact that a customer was involved.
I think sponsor tables at the nationals are an important thing. In many cases, it's a way to get a shooter back in the game when equipment fails. It offers a chance for people to see new and interesting equipment and it adds to the general atmosphere of a big match.
FWIW Rob, over the last three nationals combined; my sponsorship has been a total of $5000 cash straight to the match budgets (with no requirement for them to sell something off or raffle it) and to my knowledge, all of them needed the money to put on the match.