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    Prep Rally

    Maryland swim team retroactively loses county title because of bizarre shaving violation

    A Maryland girls swimming team has had its county championship title retroactively stripped for one of the more bizarre retroactive punishments to come down in recent years: It was deemed that improper shaving had occurred.

    The Broadneck boys and girls varsity swimming teams — BroadneckAthletics.orgThe Broadneck boys and girls varsity swimming teams — BroadneckAthletics.org

    That's right, improper shaving. Not shaving points mind you, but shaving of body hair. And, as it turns out, if the unnamed player implicated had only shaved a couple hours earlier, she and her teammates would still have their county title.

    As reported by a number of Maryland news outlets, the Baltimore Sun and Annapolis Capital among them, the Broadneck (Md.) High girls swimming squad lost its Anne Arundel County title after it was determined that one of the team's swimmers shaved on-site just before the start of the event. National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) rules for swimming, diving and water polo stipulate that athletes can not shave before, during or after a meet once a team is on-site.

    The reason why the NFHS institutes a no shaving on-site policy is to protect the swimmers themselves from possible blood transmission or, in general, doing full body shaves in high school locker rooms, which would maximize the possibility of unsafe practices like sharing razors. Still, the rule can seem quite a bit over the top when one considers generally acceptable practices for other sports; after all, no one is telling football or basketball players that they can't shave after a game or practice.

    Because of the violation, Broadneck lost all points won by the swimmer implicated, dropping the Bruins from first to third place in the final standings. Severna Park (Md.) High was later declared the county champion after Broadneck's lost points were redistributed.

    Meanwhile, the Annapolis Capital reported that Broadneck swimming coach Colleen Winans was suspended for the Class 4A-3A Regional Championships which were held on Saturday because of her swimmer's violation. A release from the Anne Arundel School District cited the failure of Winans' squad to abide by "the rules of the game and promote ethical relationships among coaches and players," as the reason for the discipline taken against Winans, which included the one-meet ban.

    As Swimming World Magazine general manager Jason Marsteller noted in an email with Prep Rally, it's the retroactive aspect of Broadneck's punishment that may be most bizarre.

    "I'm not sure I've seen much of this type of punishment within the sport," Marsteller wrote in an email. "About the only place retroactive punishments happen is in the case of positive doping tests."

    Certainly doping tests and shaving seem a world apart, even if both might provide competitive advantages (doping for obvious reasons, and shaving to reduce drag for competitive swimmers).

    Despite Winans absence, Broadneck returned to the top of the area standings, emerging with both a boys and girls regional title. The Bruins cruised past runners-up Severna Park by 16.5 points, with a number of Broadneck swimmers citing their coach's unfortunate and bizarre suspension as motivation to win their respective events.

    [Related: Olympic swimmer Matt Grevers stuns girlfriend with proposal atop the podium]

    "I was just going for it trying to pull ahead and do it for my coach because unfortunately she's not here," Broadneck star Lauren Fogarty told the Capital after winning the 100-yard breaststroke event to seal the Bruins' regional crown. "We got disqualified in counties and she got in trouble; so that one was for her. I wanted to make the team proud and her proud."

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    Watch Full Count!
     
    • 3-6  •  Alpharetta, United States  •  1 month 14 days ago
      I just want to know how they caught this crime being committed.
    • Felix Alray  •  Irvine, United States  •  2 months ago
      Keep girls off anabolic steroids and they will not need to shave. That, or restock the team with redheads and blondes who will have a less obvious five o'clock shadow!
    • WM  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  2 months ago
      And there is no penalty for peeing in the pool ?
      • ncf 2 months ago
        apparently not
      • Jim 2 months ago
        only from the high dive
      • J 2 months ago
        No, cause the chlorine is supposed to kill all the AIDS cooties. So, that's allowed.
    • Deb  •  2 months ago
      I feel the rule should be if they are caught shaving it needs to be reported BEFORE the girl enters the water, not after, she should have never swam. Reporting it after they had won was just a means to disqualify them out of bitterness! Why wait to report it? There is no other explanation than bitterness.
      • Chandra 2 months ago
        Agreed
      • Eric 2 months ago
        I agree. If the idea behind the rule is to keep the swimmers safe from bacteria and disease, then it should have been reported before. This just shows that people are more concerned with winning than safety and the rule is not doing its job.
      • MidwestGuy 2 months ago
        Indeed!
    • brian  •  Massillon, United States  •  2 months ago
      My memory may be failing me, but i believe this is the same school that had a wrestler disqualified from the county tournament just a few days ago because his mom was kicked out of the stands for no apparent reason. Seems like allot of issues with the governing or this counties high school athletics rules. Time to start recognizing whats important, and get rid of these #$%$ who are in charge of the sporting world, yet have absolutley nothing to do with it.
      • Randall 2 months ago
        crap its anne arundle county maryland, good for casinos and shootings at the local mall, seafood and the naval academy.

        I say let the navy run the whole county, it owuld be cheaper, safer and saner!
    • Colleen  •  Baltimore, United States  •  2 months ago
      To set the record straight a swimmer from another team reported to her coach that my swimmer had shaved her armpits. I ran to my swimmer said "why were you shaving, you could be disqualified!?" She asked, 'Why?' Right then I was sick with the realization that I had forgotten to tell my entire 40 person swim teams not to shave before, during, or after onsite at a swim meet. Instead of disqualifying my swimmer, I did not because I felt that I had done a huge disservice to her and the team by not informing them of the rule. I reported myself after the end of the meet to the Athletic Directors . So by throwing a life-ring to my swimmer, I sank my ship. Lesson learned by my team and me. Follow the rules to the letter and the outcome will be far better. Unfortunately, the press release didn't go out until over a week after the violation, so what has been listed as retroactive was actually done prior to regions so this became bigger news than it should have been. I apologized to all of my team, parents, and administrators. And I am sorry to my swimming community as this is a sport I love to coach and teach. Sincerely, Coach Winans
      • secretsauce 2 months ago
        Finally, some actual information! Thanks! Where did you find this?
      • secretsauce 2 months ago
        Major kudos to the coach for her honesty.
      • secretsauce 2 months ago
        Whoah. I just read more carefully. I didn't realize I was actually addressing the coach herself. What I said stands. MAJOR props for honesty ... that is a far more powerful lesson to the athletes than all the wins/losses and backstroke laps in the world!
    • robert d  •  Cleveland, United States  •  2 months ago
      Stay hairy my friends
      • Ginger 2 months ago
        That's only for no shave November :)
      • Confidential 2 months ago
        I like it, but not all the time.
      • David 2 months ago
        Don't stop December
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Gainesville, United States  •  2 months ago
      i bet michael phelps pees in the pool
    • STEVEN  •  2 months ago
      is there a limit to stupidity ?
    • Ken  •  Forest City, United States  •  2 months ago
      Thank goodness we came down hard on this one.......next thing you know there will be steroids in sports, kids lying about their age in Little League, and cheating in NASCAR.
    • SONJA  •  Wallingford, United States  •  2 months ago
      I coached swimming for many years and never heard of that rule.
    • Kathy  •  Burlington, Ontario  •  2 months ago
      we have lost the meaning of fair and equitable conduct. its all about get the prize no matter what you have to wine about to get it.
    • Tim  •  Doylestown, United States  •  2 months ago
      blood in the pool...makes sense...so ladys can not swim during a certain time?? is that a rule to?
    • Tom  •  2 months ago
      I came here only for the comments.
    • TcG  •  2 months ago
      This has been a rule in swimming for decades. It is a valid safety issue. Swimmers shave body hair to streamline to go faster. It is a very common practice, however shaving in locker room venues prior to events used to result in regular incidents of open cuts and bleeding. Blood on the floors, sometimes uncontrollable bleeding, open cuts in the pools.... it was a mess. Want to shave??? Go ahead..... just do it at home prior to arriving. Any and every Coach knows this hard and fast rule. Athletes should know this too.

      Now..... it would seem to me that any responsible sports reporter taking time to write this article would have done at least some basic research to the reasoning behind this just rule and would have reported it with a little more objectivity. Perhaps the sensationalism of simply reporting that some foolish kid caused her team a title garners more press than the real truth. Sad.
    • stim u lator  •  Charlotte, United States  •  2 months ago
      How many of y'all just read this item to see the comments?
    • lobo  •  Overton, United States  •  2 months ago
      and where is the proof!
    • Bob  •  2 months ago
      I just guess common sense isn't common anymore......A better story would be if the "winning team" would give the title to the proper winner......
    • Dieter  •  St Louis, United States  •  2 months ago
      That is like totally STUPID. They must have been educated by the NCAA.
    • Jonathan  •  Des Moines, United States  •  2 months ago
      I think a lot of people missed the point here. It isn't the threat of bleeding in the pool. It's the threat of sharing razors in the locker room. That's why it's banned before and after an event. Still kinda harsh tho...

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