In the tight-knit world of Delmarva Peninsula high school basketball, a fiery Facebook rant has sparked a heated debate on local feeds.
Nick Purnell, a former player and coach with deep roots in Maryland hoops, didn’t hold back in a post that’s racking up shares and comments.
Titled “Long post alert,” his words cut straight to the heart of what’s gone wrong with the Bayside Conference’s latest tweak to junior varsity rules.
“Shame on you,” he repeats like a mantra, calling out conference leaders for what he sees as a betrayal of the kids they claim to serve.
Purnell’s frustration boils down to this: JV basketball exists to build the next generation of varsity standouts, teaching fundamentals under pressure.
But the new Bayside rules—10-minute quarters with a running clock that only stops in the final minute of each—flip that script upside down.
A running clock means the game ticks away nonstop during live play, turning matches into quick sprints rather than the strategic battles kids will face on the varsity level.
Varsity games, by contrast, follow the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association (MPSSAA) standard of eight-minute quarters with a full stop-clock, where every whistle halts the action and demands sharp decision-making.
“How can you prepare JV players for the Varsity level with 2 different set of rules?” Purnell asks. “What will these JV players learn with a running clock? NOTHING!!!!”
Via Facebook
He doesn’t stop there. Purnell paints a vivid picture of the fallout: rushed games that limit playing time, fewer kids eager to try out, and habits more suited to the breakneck pace of AAU tournaments than structured school ball.
He suspects the real motive is laziness, as administrators and athletic directors are eager to wrap up after a long school day. And here’s the kicker: this isn’t some statewide MPSSAA mandate.
It’s a Bayside Conference special, cooked up locally and hitting only teams in Wicomico, Somerset, and Worcester counties. That makes it sting even more, like a power play dressed as progress.
He writes:
“You should be ashamed for wanting to CHEAT these kids out of wanting to learn EVERYTHING about the game of basketball, This is about the kids, NOT YOU and what little bit of POWER YOU WANT TO DISPLAY!!!”
Via Facebook
Purnell’s plea taps into a bigger truth in youth sports. Running clocks aren’t new; they’re often pitched as mercy rules to end blowouts early, promote sportsmanship, and keep games under two hours.
States like New Jersey rolled out expanded versions in 2025, triggering the clock at 20-point leads in the second half to protect young athletes from lopsided drubbings and reduce injury risks from tired legs.
But critics, including Purnell, argue it robs developing players of crucial reps: learning to inbound under pressure, foul strategically, or mount comebacks when the clock’s your enemy.
In JV, where skill gaps are wide and experience is thin, a nonstop clock might speed things up, but at what cost? Fewer touches mean less growth, and that “get-home-early” vibe? It reeks of prioritizing adult convenience over kid development.
The Post Struck a Chord with Coaches, Parents, and Longtime Fans who Appreciate the Game’s Traditions
DropTop Jones, a local voice in the scene, offers a counterpunch with a shrug:
“I can’t lie jv round here so bad I don’t blame them for changing the rules get that shit over with. Game play is terrible !!!”
Via Facebook
He flips the script, advising rookies to focus on school squads over travel ball, where the intensity actually mirrors the demands of varsity play.
It’s a raw take, JV can feel like rec league chaos anyway, so why prolong it?
Then there’s Delmarva Sports featuring Coach Bill, who lines up squarely with Purnell:
“I agree percent Let Them Play …the idea is to prepare them for next level! You can’t learn next level if you play by rec ball rules??? Honestly running clock should only be used in the event of slaughter down by 20 start of quarter?”
Via Facebook
Bill nails the developmental angle, pushing for full games unless it’s a total rout.
His words highlight how these rules could widen the chasm between JV and varsity, leaving underclassmen scrambling to adapt mid-season.
William Johnson dives deeper into the politics, questioning the puppet masters:
“If the coaches are not asking for the rules to change and MPSSAA is not changing the rules, then who is suggesting the rule change? When decisions are made in a school, it falls squarely on the principals and the superintendents.” He calls it marginalization, pure and simple—why slap a running clock on JV basketball but not shave soccer halves or lacrosse periods for “less skilled” kids? “Would they ever cut JV baseball to 3 innings? Heck no!!!” Johnson’s fire underscores a painful Eastern Shore reality: resources stretched thin, voices from smaller schools drowned out. If this flies, he warns, it’s a neon sign that “certain kids DO NOT MATTER.”
Via Facebook
Perhaps the most gut-wrenching response comes from Greg Bozman Sr., a retired coach who unloads years of pent-up grievances.
He zooms out to the rot eating at the game: unchecked travel ball “experts” with zero clue, shady recruitment across sports, lopsided matchups between mega-schools and shrinking rural ones.
“Is it time for a 1A and 2A Champion in all sports like football?” he muses, shouting out steadfast coaches like Derrick S. Fooks, who grind at underdog programs, win or lose.
Bozman laments the lost art of mentorship, where veterans school the young guns through tough, teachable lessons. Ref shortages? Sure, that might factor in, but the core sin? “Sad to say this, but there are very few in it for the kids anymore.”
His sign-off, “Let me be quiet, I’ve probably said to much already but I could say so much more,” lands like a mic drop, inviting everyone to fill in the blanks.
As the 2025-26 season tips off, Purnell’s “Bayside Conference Shame” cry hangs in the air like a contested rebound.
In a sport built on heart and hustle, sidelining the kids for convenience is a foul no one should call.
Eastern Shore hoops fans deserve better and so do the next wave of dreamers lacing up for JV tryouts.
