The only problem with this is clubs at that point are dictating parental rights,
Wrestling clubs are private organizations and can accept or deny members as they so choose.
As can parents choose a different club if they don't like club policy.
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you are also dictating into a private organization set rules which prevents them from exercising their own rights.
I'm not sure what you mean here but if you are saying it should be up to each club what their policy is, I agree. Just as long as they do the right thing and not allow athletes to be members while their school team is in season.
Then you are taking away the right of the individual wrestler and preventing their own opportunity at improving. These types of forced rules, are a part of the very reason that some home school parents transfer their children. Again, I am speaking of MS and JH, although I suspect some could use the same argument. There are the Henry Cejudo's for example that simply transfer out of the system entirely and move on. I don't think that weakening the status of Kansas wrestling is the answer to this problem, and I will assure you, if forcing wrestlers to wrestle with their JH or MS programs is what you are suggesting, the status and quality of Kansas wrestling will go down as our wrestlers will have even less of an opportunity to wrestle the nations best, and thus not get the improvement they need.
For some the JH and MS programs are the way to go, for some of those programs, there are great coaches, and great benefits, but that is not the answer for all kids. When you state this, you indicate that every child who wrestled at USJOC, Cliff Keen Kick Off Classic, and the upcoming Tulsa Nationals among others were wrong to do so. I challenge those kids, especially in the ages we speak of, get better because they wrestle the best in the country. Them getting better strengthens the HS programs and thus opportunities for Kansas HS wrestlers.