Now the NCS is throwing D6 schools into the Open. Good thing Folsom isn’t in the NCS.
This comment reminds me that Open is called open for a reason. Its not another class of DI but intrinsically is open to all levels. The Open division concept has been used in CCS for a long time in varying degrees. But it became vogue when CIF created an open division in 2008 to address this very question of what do do about schools that are way better than its section-sanctioned division. In that year, Grant was chosen to represent the north even though they were SJS's D2 champ.
Fast forward to 2012, the CIF voted to start the regional games. An Open division was used to grab the theorical two best teams for North and South to play in regionals. It was later eliminated in 2014 by the CIF (ie the Folsom Rule) 10-0 to send one theorical best team straight to the SBG Open division. That year, a very good Folsom team was self-crowned by Richardson and crew as the best team in the CIF even though they were able to avoid the best team in both NorCal and SoCal.
Using the same Open division concept, the NCS created an open division in 2016. The probable intent was to get another top team into the RBG playoffs besides the ulta-perennial DLS team. And possibly the unintended consequence of an Open division would be to include a very strong lower level teams into Open. It seems the NCS strengthened this possibility for this year by this bylaw augmentation found in the NCS Sports and General Ruling Handbook. " Each NCS member school shall be classified for postseason competition by competitive equity. See Bylaw 507H. (Board of Managers 4/14/23)" Theoretically a NCS D7 team could be put into Open division if their competitive equity warranted to seeding.
The CCS section got the bright idea to follow NCS' action by forming their own Open/D1 version for playoffs. The CCS already used competitive equity to help seed their playoff teams. This practice is so deeply integrated in the CCS system that the section doesn't identify regular season divisions. However, CCS does group leagues by multi-year strength into A, B or C levels. And the CCS modified its playoff system this year by restricting only C level teams into division 5 for playoff purposes.
As I understand it, NCS is not throwing D6 schools into the Open. Instead independent teams are earning their way into Open by their quality season of play. If a team is bad enough to stay in D6, they will never make it to Open.