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New 2008 Regulation on
Baseball 12-Year-Olds in the Majors
The following is a reprint of the new 2008
baseball rule requiring all 12 year olds in the Majors. The original
article can be found on the National Little League website:
www.littleleague.org/media/12yrold_regulation_changes.asp
One of the agenda items voted on by District
Administrators at the 24th Little League International Congress in
Houston earlier this year, was a regulation requiring that all
league age 12-year-olds must be placed onto a Major Division team.
The measure was enacted, with 68 percent of District
Administrators (delegates) voting to approve it.
The new Regulation V. 1. reads:
“The selection of players for the various teams within a league
shall be in compliance with the Little League Draft Selection
System as detailed in the Operating Manual. NOTE: All candidates
who are league age twelve (12) must be drafted to a Little League
Major Division team, or to a Junior League team. Exceptions can
only be made with written approval from the District
Administrator, and only if approved at the local league level by
the Board of Directors and the parent of the candidate.”
The purpose of the new regulation is to ensure that local leagues
are using the Minor Division as a training ground, and not keeping
capable 12-year-olds from “moving up.” For those 12-year-olds who
may lack the skills to play at the Major Division level, there is
a process for allowing them to play in the Minor Division,
provided certain conditions are met. (However, the prohibition on
12-year-olds pitching in the Minor Division remains.)
Recently, questions have been asked about putting this new
regulation into effect. We have listed the answers below.
Question 1: If a league age 12-year-old does not tryout as
required, is the league still required to place him/her within the
Majors Division?
Answer: If a player/candidate does not attend 50 percent of the
tryouts, the local league board of directors has two choices:
1. Accept the player’s excuse for missing the tryout(s) and make
the player eligible for selection to a Major Division team, or,
2. Decline the excuse and the candidate would not be eligible for
participation in any division within the league for that entire
season. Little League would encourage leagues to be lenient in
accepting 12-year-olds’ excuses in an attempt to provide as many
opportunities as possible.
Question 2: Based on the response above, how do local leagues
deal with late registrants who are league age 12?
Answer: A late registrant would be assigned to a Major Division
team if the local league board of directors chooses to accommodate
him/her. If this results in an unequal number of players on the
Major Division rosters, the league can follow procedures for
requesting a waiver from the Charter Committee to allow it.
However, if the league and parents determine that the player’s
skill level would dictate that he/she should be assigned to the
Minor Division, they would go through the process of obtaining a
waiver from the District Administrator as noted in the regulation.
Question 3: Who will review requests for 12-year-olds to be
retained in the Minor Division?
Answer: The parent(s) or legal guardian (as assigned by a court of
jurisdiction) of the player in question, in conjunction with the
local league board of directors, must submit a request to the
District Administrator for final approval. As noted in the new
regulation, final authority on requests of this nature rests with
the District Administrator.
Question 4: Will there be a form for the parents to complete
and submit to leagues and District Administrators if they are
requesting that their child not be placed in the Majors Division,
so that this process can be expedited?
Answer: Yes. The form is now available in PDF format at
http://www.littleleague.org/media/12yrold_waiver.pdf. This
simple form allows the league and District Administrator to
maintain records of these approvals.
Question 5: Is there any recourse if a league age 12-year-old
is drafted, practices, and even participates in Major Division
games – and then the player, parents, and/or league realize the
player is not capable of playing in that division?
Answer: Little League encourages local leagues to conduct a
thorough assessment of each player at tryouts to avoid this
situation. In cases where a player’s assessment causes concern
about participation in the Major Division, league officials should
review the assessment with the parents to identify what is in the
best interest of the child. However, when situations above arise,
these matters should be forwarded to the District Administrator
for a final decision.
Question 6: If the player is drafted onto a Major Division
team, what if the parent’s assessment and the manager’s assessment
of a player differ?
Answer: If the parent’s assessment is that the player should be
moved to the Minor Division, but the manager believes the player
should remain in the Major Division, the local league board of
directors has two choices:
1. Support the parent’s assessment and forward the request to the
District Administrator for final approval.
2. Support the manager’s assessment and inform the parents that
the player will remain on the Major Division roster. (The parent
may then choose to allow the player to continue in the Major
Division, or remove the child from the league.)
If the manager of the Major Division team believes that the player
should be moved to the Minor Division, the local league board of
directors needs to review the assessment with the parents. If the
parents do not support the assessment, the player must remain in
the Major Division.
Question 7: Is the limit of eight league age 12-year-olds per
team going to increase?
Answer: Not at this time. The intent of this rule change is NOT to
create a Major Division that is essentially made of all league age
12-year-olds. Little League International conducted a survey of
all District Administrators via e-mail to see if this limit should
be eliminated. The result showed that 60 percent of DAs were in
favor of it. But because the number falls short of the two-thirds
required to make a change at the International Congress, the limit
will remain and Little League will monitor the rule for
adjustments in 2009 and beyond. (As with any rule or regulation,
the local league board of directors may request a waiver using the
method described in the rulebooks under “Charter Committee/Waivers
of Rules and Regulations.)
Question 8: Is the 10-team limit in the Major Division going to
remain for 2008?
Answer: Yes. However, if a local league has more than 10 Major
Division teams, it does not automatically mean the league must
split, or to field two tournament teams in that division. The
10-team limit will be considered, along with population, player
enrollment in all divisions, competing programs and other factors
to determine when or if a league must split into two leagues or
divisions. With almost all 12-year-olds playing in the Major
Division, the Charter Committee will have a more accurate gauge of
the size and scope of the league through team registration.
Question 9: Could a local league only accept those 12-year-olds
it believes are capable of playing in the Major Division, and
“cut” the rest to avoid processing these waivers?
Answer: Absolutely not. That would be completely contrary to the
policies and goals of Little League. Any child who is eligible by
age and residence to play in the league should be given that
opportunity, without regard to playing ability. A league in which
children are completely turned away because of playing ability is
doing a disservice to those children, their families, and their
community.
Question 10: Could a District Administrator have a policy to
refuse to sign any waivers allowing a 12-year-old to play in the
Minors?
Answer: No. The District Administrator must take each case on its
own merits and make what he/she believes to be a fair judgment
each and every time.
Question 11: Could our league create two divisions within the
Major Division (in effect a “Major A” and a “Major B” division),
and place the lesser-skilled 12-year-olds in the “Major B”
division?
Answer: No. There can be only one group of teams classified as
“Majors” in any chartered local Little League, and all league age
12-year-olds must be placed into that division, subject to the
provisions of this new regulation. (All teams within the Major
Division of a local Little League must play a common schedule in
which each team plays all other teams in that division.)
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