Transcript Slide 1

New TSA Rep Boot
Camp
May 15, 2012
Eligibility Questions
Eligibility: Question 1
• You’re an HOA-based team. Your assistant coach and
his family have moved out of the neighborhood but he
still wants to swim. You:
a) Let him swim because he is coaching and still young
enough to swim.
b) Tell him he can only coach, not swim, because HOA
teams don’t have any other option.
c) Ask your HOA board if they would be interested in
offering a class of membership with full club
privileges that would cover coaches. If the coach
(or his family) purchase the membership, he could
swim.
Eligibility: Question 2
• You are a club that sells memberships. A member has asked if she
can buy a “swim team only” membership. She explains that her
family hardly ever uses the pool other than to attend meets so it
only seems fair. You:
a) Explain that the only club memberships that make a swimmer
eligible for TSA must include “full club privileges”.
b) Create a class of membership for swim team swimmers that is
substantially cheaper than for regular members. Code the swim
team only members’ access cards so they can’t access the pool
outside of swim team practice hours or meets.
c) Discuss with your club’s board whether it is makes sense to
sell partial season plans to your pool that cover just the
months of June and July. Make sure the plans are advertised
to the universe of prospective members and include full club
privileges.
Question 3: The new kid on the block
• A new family moves to your neighborhood after the start of
swim season and signs up for the team. You subsequently
learn they swam the previous week for another TSA team.
Are they eligible to swim on your team?
a) Yes, they moved so they can’t swim on the old team
anyhow.
b) Yes, that was a club team in the North League. We’re a HOA
team in the South League.
c) No, once you swim an event with another TSA team, that’s
your team for the summer.
d) No, (see answer “C”) but you can let them practice with
your team and participate in social events.
Question 4: Keeping teenagers
• You are desperate to keep your teen swimmers. Which of the
following would be legal?:
a) Waive the swim team fees for swimmers aged 15-18.
b) Offer reduced swim team fees based on the number of meets a
swimmer participates in.
c) Eliminate the volunteer requirement for teen’s parents.
d) Offer a “scholarship” to teens who swim with the team their final
three years.
e) Waive the club dues, but also restrict access to the pool.
f) Allow swim team teens that move out of an HOA neighborhood to
buy a pool membership, but don’t publicize it.
g) Waive the club dues for teens who are also year-round swimmers.
Getting Organized
Roster Prep
• Need name and age (as of June 1st) of every
swimmer.
Who gets the roster?
• Coach needs it to seed meets
• Opposing team’s TSA rep gets copy at each
meet
• Scorers and ribbon writers need a copy
Volunteers
• Make sure volunteers know what to expect
before they sign up for jobs.
• Arrange to train volunteers at time trials or
before. (TSA offers clinic for starters, online
clinics and in-person clinics for stroke & turn
judges.)
• Pair experienced volunteers with novices for
first two meets.
Getting jobs filled with no gripes
• Appoint a volunteer coordinator (if you don’t
already have one).
• Happy volunteers are people who get help
finding the position that works for them.
• Consider breaking volunteer jobs into shifts.
• Should volunteering be mandatory vs.
optional?
Countdown to meet day
• You need to know who will be at the meet. Have
“miss a meet” sheet posted at pool, or use an
online process for swimmers to notify coach if
they won’t be swimming.
• Some teams require a positive check-in, i.e. their
families must tell the coach they are swimming.
• Make sure the coach has a time for as many
swimmers as possible (timed in practice or during
time trials).
The seeding rules
• The main event is the only event that is scored at a meet.
You’ll want your fastest swimmers in the main events.
• Events are segregated by age and gender. The age
groupings are 6 and under, 7-8, 9-10, 11-12, 13-14 and 1518.
• 6 and unders swim the freestyle, back and breast for 15
yards.
• 7-8 and 9-10s swim the free, back, breast and fly for 25
yards, and the same distance for each leg of relays.
• 11 and up groups swim the four strokes for 50 yards, and
the same distance for each leg of relays.
• The order of events: Medley relay, freestyle, backstroke,
breaststroke, butterfly, freestyle relay.
The seeding rules, cont.
• 6 and under swimmers can swim in a
maximum of two main events.
• Swimmers 7 and older can swim in a
maximum of three main events.
• Relays don’t count toward the maximum.
• Seed fastest to slowest for the rest of the
heats.
Allowing everyone a main event swim
Some small teams will allow everyone a main event
swim.
Why this isn’t a great idea:
• It slows down the meet. (46 individual events)
• It doesn’t help anyone’s “self-esteem” to finish
dead last.
• If your team insists on doing this, set a minimum
time for each age group/gender/stroke.
What lane am I in anyhow?
• In 6-lane (and larger) pools the home team uses odd
numbers lanes, the visiting team uses even-numbered
lanes.
• For main events, only the middle 6 lanes are used if the
pool has fewer than 6 lanes, only lanes 1-4 are used.
• In subsequent heats, all lanes are used. Once a team
runs out of swimmers in an event, the other team’s
swimmers can fill all remaining lanes.
• Fastest swimmer (or relay) on each team gets that
team’s centermost lane; subsequent swimmers get
progressively farther away from the center.
What lane am I in anyhow? (cont.)
• Example 1: In 6-lane pool, visiting team’s “A” relay
or swimmers gets lane 4; “B” gets lane 2; “C” gets
lane 6.
• Example 2: In 8-lane pool, visiting team’s “A” relay
or swimmer gets lane 4; “B” gets lane 6; “C” gets
lane 2 (not difference from 6-lane example!)
Heats can also use lane 8.
• Example 3: In 10-lane pool, visiting team’s “A”
relay or swimmer gets lane 6; “B” gets lane 4: “C”
gets lane 8. Heats can also use lanes 2 and 10.
Running the meet without pre-seeding
• For detailed guidelines, see “TSA Meet
Organization” on our website.
• In TSA, each team seeds its own swimmers.
• Coach creates a master list for each age and
gender group listing each swimmer and their
ranking for each event.
• Coach fills in pink (girls) and blue (boys) slips for
each main event.
• Event list is then used by the Clerk of Course to
flow swimmers into the right lanes.
Traditional TSA lineup system – not used as often anymore
7-8 Girls
Medley Relay
Swimmer
Team
1
2
3
4
Back
Brst
Fly
Free
Individual Events
Free Relay
Free
Back
Brst
Fly
Team
1
2
3
4
Anderson, Amy
B
3
6
5
3
2
A
4
Bennett, Brianna
A
4
1
2
4
1
A
1
Cox, Courtney
B
2
4
4
1
5
B
2
Davis, Diana
B
1
3
3
2
4
B
3
7
7
6
6
7
A
3
A
2
Ellis, Elise
No Show
Franklin, Felicia
A
3
5
6
7
Gomez, Gabriella
B
4
8
9
9
Harris, Hannah
---
---
---
---
---
---
---
---
Jackson, Jessica
A
1
10
11
8
9-10 C
1
King, Kendra
9-10 C
2
11
10
10
B
1
Larson, Lindsay
9-10 C
1
9
8
8
9-10 C
3
Martin, Madison
A
2
2
1
5
B
4
3
Write in younger swimmers swimming up to this age group here (relays only)
BOYS EVENT
TYPE:
Main
Heat
AGE: 6-U 7-8 9-10 11-12 13-14 15-18
Medley Relay
Breaststroke
Lane
1
Freestyle
Backstroke
Butterfly Freestyle Relay
Contestant
Club
Place
John Brown
GG
Tom White
GG
Joey Grey
GG
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Home team in odd-numbered lanes, visiting team in even-numbered lanes
Winning Time
:
.
Fine-tuning the manual system
• Some teams give the Clerk of Course only the
pinks and blues for lining up main event
swimmers with a separate sheet for the heat
swimmers. Don’t do this. The Clerk of Course
needs the master list – or a hand-seeded Excel
spreadsheet. Reason: Those pinks and blues
need to go to the Recorder who stands near
the Place Judges and takes the information
down at the end of the race.
46: GIRLS AGE 15-18 50 Yards BREASTSTROKE
Lane 1
Lane 2
Lane 3
Gore, Hannah (80)
Glenridge Gators
Main / Heat 1
Lane 4
Lane 5
Lane 6
Lane 5
Lane 6
May, Cori (85)
Glenridge Gators
Heat 2
47: BOYS AGE 7-8 25 Yards BUTTERFLY
Lane 1
Lane 2
Lane 3
Lane 4
Main / Heat 1
Senowitz, Owen (31)
Glenridge Gators
Ballance, Tanner (15)
Glenridge Gators
Brents, Aidan (26)
Glenridge Gators
Heat 2
Donkin, Campbell (17)
Glenridge Gators
Downs, Robbie (18)
Glenridge Gators
Sherk, Adam (32)
Glenridge Gators
Using software or manually seeding
each event vs. traditional TSA method
• Pros:
Older swimmers can line themselves up
Easier for kid pushers to help line up younger
swimmers
The onus isn’t all on the Clerk of Course.
• Cons:
A little bit more work
To avoid swimming with empty lanes need Clerk
who can re-adjust the lane assignments on the
fly.
Changing Pre-seeding On The Fly
• TSA rules don’t require a time on every swimmer.
Stopwatches, wireless timing devices, etc. are optional.
• If you pre-seed the meet you must be able to fill in
empty lanes on the fly to make the meet go faster.
• Make sure swimmers have body marking in case they
are in the other team’s lane.
• Jot the information about who is moved to what lane
on your seeding printout (Clerk of Course) so you can
later match times to swimmers.
• Be a good sport and help get times for all children. If
you aren’t timing your lanes, it’s fine to ask the other
team for timers.
Seeding and move-up questions
One team is pre-seeding, one isn’t
You’ve bought a wireless timing system and meet management software. The
volunteers who operate the software want every heat pre-seeded to avoid
confusion, and to not change anything. But not all the teams you swim use meet
management software. To keep the meet moving quickly you can:
a) Ask the team who is visiting you to send a file with the number of swimmers per
age/gender group to help you seed your own swimmers without having excess
empty lanes.
b) When you see an event “mismatch” during the meet (you’ve got twelve 9/10 boys
and the visiting team has only six), fill in empty lanes with your swimmers and ask
the visiting team to record their times and pass them along to you.
c) Do nothing. You’re the host, you can swim with empty lanes.
d) Fill in all the lanes regardless of whether you will get electronic times on your
swimmers who are in “opponent” lanes. Timing races is optional in TSA. Meet
efficiency isn’t. [While this last statement is true, try to arrange times with the
opponent. And, yes, meet efficiency is important.
Meet Delays
Soon after the start of the meet, the host team stops the
meet because they are having a problem with their timing
device, or to re-seed races because several swimmers didn’t
show up. How long do you have to wait?
102.7.3 The start of a meet may not be delayed by more than
30 minutes for reasons other than inclement weather. New
This Year: Delays within a meet, other than weather related,
that do not have a bearing on the completion of scheduled
races, must not last longer than 10 minutes.
Don’t stop a meet to re-seed. Flow Swimmers into the Lanes
and assign their times later.
Make sure you have stopwatches, clipboards and pencils if
your timing system malfunctions.
Combining heats and events
Your team has four 15-18 male swimmers and the
team you are swimming has two. You are
swimming in a six-lane pool. Is there a way to
swim both the “heats” and the “main events” at
one time?
a) No, that’s never allowed.
b) Yes, the “heat” swimmers should be grouped in
either lanes 1 and 2 or 5 and 6 and the starter
should inform the place judges which lanes are
“heat” swims.
Even More Relay Moveups
You have two 13-14 boys and six 15-18 boys. You
want to move up the 13-14 boys to fill out two
relays. Which option is legal:
a) Move the two 13-14 boys to make up the
balance of the B relay. True age group swimmers
must fill the initial relay positions; moved-up
swimmers may only fill the balance of the lowest
relay.
b) Since those two 13-14 boys are fast swimmers,
put them on the A relay.
More heat/event combining
You are swimming in a 6-lane pool. One team has two girls 15-18 relay
teams and one boy’s relay team. The other team has two boys’
teams and one girls’ team. Can you have boys and girls race at the
same time?
a) That’s not fair to the girls.
b) Since you can’t put an empty lane between the two races, you can’t
do it.
c) Since you can’t put an empty lane between the two races, first
discuss it with the visiting team’s TSA Rep. With his/her permission
you can race them at the same time, grouping the boys on one side
(lanes 1, 2 and 3) and the girls on the other (lanes 4,5, and 6). Make
sure the starter announces it so the place judges can assign
themselves accordingly.
Relay move-ups – How to get the most
kids the most time in the water
Your team has three 15-18 boys, three 13-14 boys, four 11-12
boys, twelve 9-10 boys, five 7-8 boys and one 6-year-old
who can swim 50 yards. Which of the combinations below
are legal relay move-ups available to your coach?
a) Move one 13-14 boy to swim with the 15-18 boys.
b) Place the 6-year-old with the three 13-14 boys and the
extra 7-year old with the 15-18 boys.
c) Take the fastest two 11-12 boys and put one with the 15/18
boys and one with the 13-14 boys. Move up the 6 year old
and the extra 7 year old to swim with the remaining 11/12
boys to form a team.
d) None of these options are legal.
More relay move-ups
During the warm-up, you discover the other team doesn’t
have enough boys to field a 15-18 boys relay team. Neither
do you. But you’ve got three extra 13-14 boys who could
swim with a 16-year-old. You:
a) Let the coach write up a blue slip with the extra 13-14 boys
and submit the relay move up information to the other
team’s TSA rep.
b) Let the coach write up a blue slip but only if the meet hasn’t
started – even though this is for the freestyle relay slated
for the end of the evening. Once the meet has started,
move-ups for reasons other than illness, accident or
expulsion aren’t allowed, unless agreed by the other team’s
TSA Rep.
Final thoughts on move-ups
• Only for relays
• Must notify the other team before the race.
• Only exception is if someone from a relay
needs to leave before the meet, then you can
fill in with a move-up but again – alert the
other team’s TSA rep.
4:30 on home meet night
• Set up the backstroke flags (if they aren’t permanently
mounted).
• Dig the 6 and under rope out of the storage, along with
the pinnies, stopwatches, clipboard, timing equipment.
• Set up a space for scorer, ribbon writers and
announcers (have them sit together with a view of the
pool).
• Set up chairs for swimmers and block off access to the
line-up area.
• Set up an area for coaches from both teams.
• Set up an area for the starter.
5 p.m. on Tuesday Night
• Home team takes the warm-up at 5. Visiting
team gets 5:30, unless another arrangement is
made ahead of time.
• If swimmers are diving they can’t have anyone
swimming toward them.
5:45 on Tuesday night
• Gather the meet officials – stroke and turn
judges, place judges, recorder, clerk of course.
• Go over decisions TSA reps made ahead of time.
• Decide on dive-overs.
• Assign spots for judging relay takeoffs and turns.
• Get the two stroke and turn judges together.
• Make sure the judges know the 6-and-under
exceptions.
Question: Judge not. . .
The visiting team lets you know they don’t have a
certified stroke and turn judge. Who would make
a suitable replacement?
a) Someone with a NCHSAA or USA Swimming
certification, even if lapsed.
b) Someone who has been a TSA stroke and turn
judge in the recent past.
c) A second stroke and turn judge from the host
team.
d) The visiting team’s TSA rep.
Calling it tight, or not so tight
Following the pre-meet officials meeting, your stroke and turn
judge tells you the other team’s stroke and turn judge
pulled her aside and said she won’t DQ any 6 and unders
and strongly advised your judge to the do same. Your S&T
judge didn’t know how to respond, but is now upset. You:
a) Tell your judge to follow the rules while you seek out the
other team’s TSA rep.
b) Ask your judge to “go soft” so as not to make waves.
c) Go up to the other team’s judge and tell them that you
won’t be doing the same.
d) Contact the other team’s TSA rep and try and come to some
sort of agreement.
The timers’ meeting
• Can be held concurrent with the officials’ meeting
• Go over how the host team’s starting equipment
works. If using a system with a light, tell timers to
start their watches on the light.
• If lending wireless timers to visiting team, show
them how they work.
• Make arrangements for “catching” times for
other teams’ swimmers that swim in your lanes.
What doesn’t happen at 5:45
The host team’s TSA rep wants to hold the 6 and
under events first. The visiting team’s TSA rep
disagrees. Who gets to decide?
a) Host team
b) Visiting team
c) The traditional event order is swum (6 and
unders don’t get grouped first) unless both
TSA reps agree prior to the day of the event to
swim the 6 and unders first.
The secrets of fast-moving swim meets
•
•
•
•
A trained starter.
Start the meet on time!
Have a swimmer in every lane for every heat – as much as possible.
Is it worth it to run the 6 and unders first? Maybe. [From the class
discussion: A trained starter, filling in all the lanes and starting on
time are the most important elements. Running all the 6 and unders
first might shave a few minutes off, but first try to hook up your 6
and under rope on poles so you can unclip it and drop it down and
then clip it back (to save time). Also, have the announcer get the kid
catchers ready. A final note: Crowded deck space is a sound
argument to make in requesting that 6 and unders run first.]
Questions: Delays and forfeits
• You are having a tough time getting your volunteers in
place for the meet. Is it okay to delay the start of the
meet? [If it starts more than 30 minutes late, barring
weather delays or agreement between reps, it is a
forfeit.]
• The host team’s TSA rep calls you the day of the meet
to ask if you can host the meet for them because their
pool has been shut down. Are you under any obligation
to host the meet on their behalf? [If you can oblige,
that would be terrific, or agree to a makeup day.
Remember, our goal is to help kids swim.]
Question: Speeding up a meet
A large team is racing in your 4- or 5-lane pool. They propose ahead of time
that neither team allow more than three heats beyond the main event in
each age/gender group. What is your obligation to accommodate them?
a) None, but that assumes you are prepared to run a very efficient meet using
a well-trained timer, starting the meet on time (barring bad weather) and
committed to keeping the lanes completely full. If bad weather threatens,
you should be willing to consider eliminating heat swims.
b) None, but you might want to consider a compromise – such as swimming a
full set of heats for the freestyle and cutting back on heats for the other
events depending on how long the meet is running.
c) None, unless bad weather threatens. It’s in your own interest at that point
to consider ways to trim the meet. [All of these answers are correct. As
discussed in the clinic, small venues are frequently quite capable of running
very efficient meets and small venue teams should not feel pressured to
cut heats if they have a reasonable expectation that they can finish the
meet in a reasonable period of time.]
About those 6 and unders
The visiting team’s 6 and under swimmers aren’t exactly
swimming on their own. What is illegal under TSA
rules?
a) Using any kind of flotation device.
b) Using flippers.
c) Having a coach “escort” them down the lane.
[While coaches sometimes escort a nervous heat
swimmer down the lane, in the interests of time and
the purposes of a swim team, the children need to
make to the rope by themselves.]
The Announcer
• Text for announcer is located on our website.
• They should definitely announce the no
smoking, and no drinking rules.
• Announce illegally parked cars.
• Call for AWOL swimmers who haven’t been
found by the kid pushers.
The races are underway
•
•
•
•
Clerk of Course hands pink/blue slips to runner to bring to Recorder.
The Recorder stands near place judges and records the finish of the races.
Place judges can gather around recorder or stand in lanes to call races.
If any two consecutive place judges disagree, those two swimmers must
be declared to have tied. If there is a disagreement between nonconsecutive place judges, the order of all the swimmers whose places are
still at issue will be determined by a poll of all the place judges.
• Recorder alerts Starter if he/she must delay start of next race.
• After recording the race, recorder hands the slip to a Runner who brings it
to the Scorers’ table.
• [As discussed in class, judges shouldn’t be twisting arms. In addition we
confirmed that judges can gather around the recorder and hold up fingers
for the lane that matches the place they’re judging (i.e. the first place
judge holds up three fingers to signal that lane three came in first). The
TSA rules suggest a different way.]
BOYS EVENT
TYPE:
Main
Heat
AGE: 6-U 7-8 9-10 11-12 13-14 15-18
Medley Relay
Breaststroke
Lane
1
Freestyle
Backstroke
Butterfly Freestyle Relay
Contestant
Club
Place
John Brown
GG
1
Tom White
GG
2
Joey Grey
GG
6
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Home team in odd-numbered lanes, visiting team in even-numbered lanes
Winning Time
: 25 .00
BOYS EVENT
TYPE:
Main
Heat
AGE: 6-U 7-8 9-10 11-12 13-14 15-18
Medley Relay
Breaststroke
Freestyle
Backstroke
Butterfly Freestyle Relay
L Contestant
a
n
e
Club
Place
1
2Dan Park
Garner
4
Garner
3
Garner
5
3
4Josh Waters
5
6Justin Poole
7
8
9
1
0
Home team in odd-numbered lanes, visiting team in even-numbered lanes
Winning Time
:
.
The A, B, C’s of scoring
• Each team supplies a scorer.
• Make sure scorer has copy of rules with them.
• Make sure each scorer is calculating the score as they
go along, and doing so independently. After each page
is filled, the two scorers should check with each other
to see that they have the same score.
• Relays are five points for first, winner take all.
• Individual events: 5 points for 1st, 3 points for 2nd, 1
point for third.
Scoring Questions
Two swimmers tie for first; how are the points divided?
a) Both swimmers get five points.
b) The first place points (5) and the second place points (3) are
added together and then divided. Each swimmer gets four
points. The swimmer placing behind them gets one point.
Two swimmers tie for third place; how are the points divided:
a) Both swimmers get one point
b) Each swimmer gets .5 points and is awarded third place.
What a score sheet looks like
Weather
Your club’s manager allows swimmers back in the water 15
minutes after the last clap of thunder or flash of lightning.
For a TSA dual meet:
a) That’s fine – it’s whatever your club’s manager says.
b) You must stay out of the water for 30 minutes, unless your
club has a more stringent policy.
How many weather delays are allowed before a meet needs
to be rescheduled?[You can postpone the meet after the
second weather delay, although you can keep it going if
both reps agree it looks like the weather will clear].
At what point can a weather-delayed meet be considered
final? [See next slide].
Calling a meet because of weather
• On the first night a meet is held, it can be
considered official after the conclusion of the
breaststroke.
• If you need to come back the next night, then
the meet can be considered official after the
conclusion of the backstroke.
Question: False Starts
The starter recalls a race after a false start. Who
is responsible for deciding whether the race
will be re-started immediately or later? The
starter
More about the starter
The starter controls the flow of the meet.
He/she should be announcing when heats are
combined, checking to see if judges are ready,
if the recorder is ready, if the timers are ready.
Helpful tip: Give the starter a heat sheet, or if
you don’t pre-seed, make sure they at least
know about how many kids will race in each
event.
Question: Weather shortened meets
and the starter’s role
• Because of a weather delay, you’ve switched
to racing only main events. In order to give the
place judges time to record finishes, is the
starter required to put additional space
between the races?
Diplomacy
• You are a visiting team Rep and you notice many
of your kids are missing their races because of
what you perceive to be the starter sending them
off too quickly. What should you do? [First
determine if the problem is with your team, i.e.
the Clerk of Course or kid pushers are getting kids
to the blocks late. If there is another problem
(the starter is starting races before another race
ends), talk to the other team’s rep. ]
Diplomacy
• You are a visiting team Rep and you notice
many of your kids are missing their races
because of what you perceive to be the starter
sending them off too quickly. What should you
do?
While the TSA rules do not address this, the USA
Swimming guideline is a good starting point:
“NEVER: Force a start by commencing a starting
sequence before the swimmers are ready.”
Question: Judging situations
• During the 6-and-under breast stroke event, you notice a S&T
judge’s arm in the air for the duration of the girls and boys main
events. You:
a) Do nothing. You aren’t allowed to look at DQ slips during the meet.
b) Go to the scorer’s table to read the slip and discover the judge
checked “hands brought below the hip line” on the slips. Since
there is a 6-and-under exemption for that in the TSA rulebook, toss
out the slips.
c) Go to the scorer’s table to read the slip. If the judge checked “hands
brought below the hip line” (an offense only for those 7 and older),
contact the other team’s TSA rep. If both TSA reps agree, the slip can
be tossed and the swimmer re-instated in the results. The TSA rep
for whichever team that judge came from should talk with the judge
about the 6 and under exceptions.
Wrapping up a meet
• At the end of the meet both TSA reps must
sign the scoring sheets. It is customary to
announce double winners for 6 and unders
and triple winners for the older age groups. It
is also customary to announce team and pool
records.
• If you want to protest the meet, don’t sign the
scoring sheet and contact the grievance
committee within 72 hours.
New Rule on Forfeiture
102.7 Change of Program and Postponement
.1 Meets shall be held as scheduled. Failure to do so
shall result in forfeiture by the team unable to fulfill
its obligation to complete an official meet. The final
score of a forfeiture shall be announced and posted
as 1-0.
The home club is not longer on the hook to take a
forfeiture if the other team won’t return to swim the
meet.
Entering meet info on the web site
• The meet’s score needs to be entered no later
than 6 pm the following day.
• The full results of a meet (including new
records, triple winners and double winners)
must be entered on the TSA web site by the
home team’s TSA Rep within 24 hours after
the conclusion of the meet.