It was a bad idea to move basketball sectional finals from neutral sites to the home gym of the higher seed, although the NJSIAA insisted that recent change was forced because of a shortage of schools willing to host games.
Imagine if Cinnaminson, which had a top boys' basketball team, had hosted the South Jersey Group 2 title game last season in its 400-seat (maybe) gymnasium. That would have been great for the Pirates and the fans who got there early - say, 3 p.m. for a 7 p.m. start - but bad for everybody else and bad for the sport.
NJSIAA commissioner Steve Timko thinks similar things can conspire to take some of the luster off sectional title games in football. He also notes that title games in every other sectional - North I, North II, and Central - have been played at neutral sites for years.
Timko can't understand why so many South Jersey people are in an uproar about the NJSIAA's decision to move South title games in Groups 1, 2, 3, and 4 to a neutral site.
"We would be remiss if we didn't have these games at the best possible facility," Timko said. "Quite frankly, we've had some complaints about the conditions of the fields for some championship games. We know the field will be in great condition, and that's best for the student-athletes."
Timko also notes that having a tripleheader at TCNJ on Saturday, Dec. 3 (after a single game is played Friday night, Dec. 2) will afford players a better opportunity to be seen by college recruiters.
That's a valid point. And it's also true that fans of the sport will be able to stick around and see all three games for the price of one admission, which is likely to be $8 for adults and $2 for students, children, and senior citizens.
The money is not the issue, although New Jersey Assemblyman John Burzichelli (D., Gloucester) insists the move to a neutral site is an "end-around" by his least favorite sports organization to gouge the public. In this case, I disagree.